Managing an entire fleet is no easy task. It is extremely difficult to reduce costs while simultaneously managing hundreds of vehicles and equipment.
To achieve this, it is essential to prevent corrective maintenance, but deciding which costs to skip and where to spend can be stressful.
What can you do when several types of maintenance come up at the same time and hit your budget? Is the technology in use up to date? For some useful tips, we take a look at what this practice consists of and what characteristics preventive and corrective maintenance has.
This type of maintenance rectifies and repairs defective systems in the equipment. Its purpose is to restore systems that are faulty and could be affecting important aspects of the vehicle, such as performance or safety. Corrective repairs require pre-planning and a logbook of outstanding work orders.
And how can you identify corrective maintenance needs? These are usually determined when an additional problem is discovered during a separate work order. For example, if a technician detects a failure during an emergency repair, a routine inspection, or while performing preventive maintenance, that problem may become a corrective maintenance order.
The objective of corrective maintenance is to restore the vehicle as quickly as possible. This provides some benefits such as:
It's essential to keep vehicles and drivers safe on the road to maintain your level of client service. But what can you do to keep your fleet in top shape? Follow these recommendations:
In conclusion, the key to fleet performance is to use sound maintenance data and analysis. In this way, you will be able to identify which areas of your fleet that require preventive care and reduce them, thus impacting corrective maintenance costs in the short, medium, and long term.