ApplicationJune 26, 2026

Four Predictive Maintenance Methods for Auxiliary Equipment: Alignment, Balancing, Oil, Thermography | KEG TRK

How to combine laser alignment, field balancing, oil analysis and IR thermography on pumps, fans and conveyors at steel, mining and power sites without duplicate spend.

Mining

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Auxiliary equipment — pumps, fans, conveyors, agitators, damper drives — rarely makes headlines until it stops a process. Yet at a typical steel, mining or power site there are 5–10× more auxiliaries than main drives. Four accessible proactive methods cover different failure modes without permanent instrumentation on every unit:

  1. Laser alignment — shaft misalignment correction.
  2. Field balancing — rotor imbalance correction.
  3. Oil analysis — internal gearbox and hydraulic condition.
  4. IR thermography — hot contacts, bearings, coolers.

None is universal. Together they close different failure mechanisms and stages of the P-F curve. They complement route SDT ultrasound on bearings and Artesis electrical monitoring on motor fleets — without fixed vibration infrastructure on every asset.

Method–defect–equipment matrix

Failure / cause Align Balance Oil IR
Coupling misalignment △ bearing heat
Rotor/wheel imbalance
Gear tooth wear △ load
Oil contamination, water
Poor electrical contact
Bearing lubrication loss
Blocked cooler

△ — indirect or late indicator.

Typical chains by site type

No-spare pump (power, steel)

  1. IR every 6 months — bearing and terminal screening.
  2. If ΔT > 15 °C — alignment check, lubrication verification.
  3. After every coupling change — mandatory laser alignment with report.
  4. Gearbox drive (if fitted) — oil analysis every 6 months.

Metallurgical ID fan

  1. Seasonal wheel cleaning + balancing.
  2. Alignment after foundation overhaul or motor replacement.
  3. Bearing thermography in shop walk-down.
  4. Oil only if gearbox with oil sump.

GOK conveyor

  1. Gearbox oil trending — primary method (dust, shock loads).
  2. Alignment after frame impact or coupling swap.
  3. Motor/VFD thermography — dust on radiator overheating.
  4. Drum balancing when belt vibration confirms imbalance.

Fleet prioritisation: where to start

Step 1. List no-spare assets with downtime cost per hour.

Step 2. Assign at least two methods per class A unit:

  • class A/B pumps — thermography + post-repair alignment;
  • ID fans — balancing + thermography;
  • conveyors — oil + thermography.

Step 3. CMMS triggers: “coupling replaced → alignment work order”; “gearbox overhaul → baseline oil sample”.

Step 4. Quarterly report: prevented failures, documented cases.

See maintenance strategies that cut downtime.

What to avoid

  • Duplicate surveys without trending — weekly IR on the same asset adds little; monthly oil on non-critical units is expensive.
  • Symptom treatment — bearing swap without alignment repeats failure (see alignment guide).
  • Balancing dirty wheels — clean first.
  • No before/after records — impossible to audit contractors or train crews.

Budget and ROI

Method Cost type Payback
Alignment Field service, 2–4 h/asset One prevented pump trip/year
Balancing Field service, 4–8 h/asset Extended ID fan bearing life
Oil analysis Sample + lab Early gearbox repair vs. crash
Thermography Walk-down + camera One prevented fire/panel fault

For a 150–300 auxiliary fleet, combined spend on four methods is usually less than one unplanned outage of a blast furnace gas path or concentrator line.

Integrator role

KEG TRK builds the programme across methods: unified walk-down checklist, finding prioritisation, link to field services (alignment, balancing, thermography) and oil sampling logistics.

Four methods do not compete — they cover different degradation stages. The auxiliary fleet stops being a reliability blind spot when every critical unit has at least two assigned control methods and a clear post-repair rule.

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