In heavy industry and the water sector, most failures that are described as ‘sudden’ do not happen suddenly. In practice, they are the final stage of a mechanical process that began much earlier.

A bearing does not fail overnight. A pump does not bend a shaft overnight. A seal does not burn out due to bad luck. In most cases, the machine continues to run while internal forces and clearances gradually change. Production continues, but the machine is no longer behaving as it was designed to.

This is where vibration analysis becomes important.

The Early Warning System

Most mechanical problems originate in a limited area. Early bearing damage, lubrication issues, misalignment, or hydraulic instability in apump typically affect only one part of the machine initially. At this stage, the repair is typically straightforward and can be planned under controlled conditions. In vibration data, this phase manifests changes in specific frequencies, directions, or impact patterns, often without a significant increase in overallvibration levels.

The Cascade Effect

If a machine continues to operate despite a developing fault, the damage will likelyspread. As clearances increase and dynamic loads grow, the shaft moves more, and the seals are exposed to greater stress. This causes damage to couplings and adjacent components. What could have been a simple bearing replacement often turns into a bearing and seal replacement, followed by a shaft inspection and longer downtime. This is not just theory; it is a common occurrence in thefield.


The Real Cost of Waiting

Waiting also changes the nature of the work. Planned maintenance and emergency repairs are fundamentally different. When a machine fails unexpectedly, access is rushed, disassembly becomes more extensive than originally required, and the work is carried out under time pressure. From a reliability perspective, vibration analysis is therefore not about predicting an exact failure date. Rather, it is about deciding when to intervene before the scope of the repair increases and working conditions deteriorate further.

Beyond the Numbers

Simply tracking overall vibration levels is rarely sufficient. While RMS values can indicate that something has changed, they do not explain the mechanical changes or which component is causing the vibration. To understand this, you need to look at spectra, time signals and measurement directions, and relate them to the machine’s actual construction and loading. In short, vibration analysis is not about collecting data; it is about understanding machine behavior.


About Skyler

Skyler prevents downtime and reduces maintenance costs through advanced IoT-driven reliability solutions. We specialize in maximizing rotating asset lifespan using AI, machine learning, and deep industry expertise. Skyler Rotate bridges the gap between raw data and actionable maintenance solutions.

Backed by industry leaders Energy Management Corporation, HECO Inc. and Northwest Electric, Electrical Apparatus Service Association (EASA) members, Skyler delivers proven predictive maintenance results.

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Don’t wait for the next ‘sudden’ failure. Contact Skyler today to start your predictive maintenance journey and achieve a positive ROI in as little as six months.