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#1 Posted : 27 January 2007 22:33:00(UTC)
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Posted By Dan dan
So here we go - looking at a piece of kit which according to the manufacturers handbook has a level of 2.6 m/s. All well and good as this is guaged on a new piece of kit. Say for example the kit is now coming on for 10 years old +, the dampening would have deteriorated in that time . I know we should be looking at maintenance etc but I am pretty sure this has been minimal.

Would would you guys say is a reasonable level to reduce the operating time say if the manufatures time was 6 hours, taking acount for wear and tear etc a sound reduction would be 3 hours

what do you think or is there a formula to account wear and tear / age of kit

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#2 Posted : 28 January 2007 08:59:00(UTC)
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Posted By Adrian Watson
Dan,

This is a case where carrying out measuring is absolutely necessary. If you do not take measurements you cannot justify your actions. Measure it or bin it and get new kit; whichever is the more appropriate action.

Regards Adrian Watson
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#3 Posted : 28 January 2007 10:22:00(UTC)
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Posted By Bob Youel

undertake reality measurement

I was with a very large council when reality measurements were not taken - to their eventual very high cost -

manufacturers details have long been known to be less that accurate
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#4 Posted : 28 January 2007 22:46:00(UTC)
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Posted By Dan dan
how do we go about measuring physical vibration for aging kit ?
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#5 Posted : 29 January 2007 08:22:00(UTC)
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Posted By Paul Leadbetter
Dan

If you don't have the expertise in-house, look for a suitably qualified consultant here: http://www.bohs.org/inde...Professional/Consultants

Paul
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#6 Posted : 29 January 2007 13:42:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ron Hunter
There are a few databases (evergrowing) with in-use measurements of a big range of tools - try umetch, karla, operc - better than relying on manufacturer's data.
That said , and maintenance issues notwithstanding, is your 'trigger' time really 6 hours - this seems way excessive for an average working day?
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#7 Posted : 29 January 2007 14:24:00(UTC)
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Posted By Pete Stewart
Dan,

You can hire the necessary kit. As long as you are competent in its use, you can then develop a rolling program to ensure all kit is measured on a regular basis.

If you need further help, drop me a line.

Pete
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