Guaranteeing system availability without the maintenance empire
As systems advance, and personnel become more career-mobile, the old model of large, long-serving maintenance teams is under pressure. Consider that a rostered team of up to a hundred is needed to maintain four ground-based radar. Add to this the effect of anti-social hours, and minimal planned-maintenance requirements, on staff motivation; the guessing game of holding inventory for possible future faults; and the burden of obsolescence鈥攁nd it鈥檚 no wonder that maintenance operations are a major headache.
But armed forces are applying their drive to streamline operations to 鈥渂ack office鈥 activities too. They鈥檙e taking an ever-more holistic approach鈥攚ith preventive maintenance and repairs integral parts of procuring key systems. And, with today鈥檚 high-value assets, a whole-life view of costs makes good financial sense too.
Forces are also turning to Thales to help them explore and develop tomorrow鈥檚 solutions. The company鈥檚 deep systems expertise, global reach鈥攁nd its culture of listening, partnership, and joint problem solving鈥攐ffer synergies that have the potential to transform maintenance operations. Improvements are being driven on at least four fronts: the large scale of Thales鈥檚 installed base ensures sufficient personnel and inventory; constant information flows from sites enable Big Data Analytics to predict and fine-tune skills and spares requirements; carefully crafted, end-to-end parts contracts assure non-inventory parts are delivered within days; and Thales鈥檚 deep design expertise can be harnessed to take the strain on managing obsolescence.
Bringing all these elements together in a partnership based on a PBL contract can go a long way to solving the headaches that maintenance presents鈥攁 genuine step forward in guaranteeing the availability of critical systems without the burden of having to administer a 鈥渕aintenance empire鈥.