Machinery Lubrication

Machinery Lubrication May June 2014

Machinery Lubrication magazine published by Noria Corporation

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Improve Equipment Meantime Between Failures Enroll Today! Noria.com 800-597-5460 Expand Your Oil Analysis Skills And Get Better Results ... A Whole Lot Faster! If yours is like many companies, you may already be winging your way around oil analysis, perhaps trying to predict failures or just basing oil drains on your oil analysis report recommendations. Either way, you probably know there's a lot about oil analysis you haven't mastered … and you might be wondering what you are missing. Wouldn't you like to know ALL about what oil analysis can do for you? Now you can! You'll Learn More Than Just Oil Analysis Extending oil and machine life are two of the primary goals of oil analysis, but analyzing the oil won't make the oil or machine last any longer. That's why Noria's proven strategy for extend- ing machine and lubricant life by up to 10X is the cornerstone of these courses. You will learn how making small adjustments to lubricant properties can result in huge savings and take your return-on-investment from oil analysis to new levels. Who Should Attend? • All Maintenance Professionals • Laboratory Analysts • Vibration Instrument Specialists • Craftsmen or Millwrights • Manufacturing and Industrial Engineers • Lubrication Technicians and Engineers • Maintenance Managers • Maintenance Supervisors • Equipment Operators • Operations Managers • Reliability Engineers • Predictive Maintenance Technicians What Industries Will Benefit? • Aerospace • Automotive Manufacturing • Earthmoving • Food and Beverage • General Manufacturing • Lumber and Wood • Municipal Utilities • Petrochemical • Pharmaceuticals • Power Generation • Primary Metals • Process Manufacturing • Pulp and Paper • Rubber and Plastic • Textile • Transportation If You Use Any Of These Machines, This Training Is A Must: • Gearboxes • Hydraulic Systems • Compressors • Final Drives • Hydrostatic Transmissions • Rolling Mills • Motor Bearings • Paper Machines • Diesel Engines • Blowers/Fans • Process Pumps • Gas Turbines • Steam Turbines 2 How often should I use oil analysis? Where is the best place to pull an oil sample? What are all these numbers I see on my oil analysis report? How clean should I keep my oil and what kind of fi lter should I use? What are the best cost-reducing strategies using oil analysis? What steps can I take to ensure that I get a good oil sample each time? How do I know if I should occasionally "sweeten" my oil with additives? What are the secrets to catching bearing faults with wear debris analysis? Are there any good field tests for oil that don't involve expensive instruments? How do I determine the remaining useful life of my oil? What are the 5 most important things I should look for on my oil analysis report? 5 5 $ $ $ Don't Let These Happen to You … • A large steel mill wanted to make every machine ready for easy oil sampling. After install- ing more than 1,200 new oil sampling ports, it began getting strange data on oil analysis reports. After investigating, it found that each of the new sampling ports was installed in the wrong location. • A company that had been using oil analysis for several years wondered why it was never able to detect pending bearing failures. After a bearing failure shut down production for more than a day, it discovered that the oil analysis tests being conducted were not capa- ble of detecting impending failure. Instead, the tests were designed to identify wrong or degraded lubricants only. Get Answers to These and All Your Questions About Oil Analysis! Oil Analysis Blunders

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