• Should New Lubricant Deliveries be Tested?

    Should New Lubricant Deliveries be Tested?

    They are labeled and stored by humans. When it comes to humans, there is one inalterable constant – we make mistakes. Sometimes this is due to lack of vigilance. Sometimes it’s lack of knowledge. It might even be because of indifference. Read More

  • An Introduction to Fluid Contamination Analysis

    An Introduction to Fluid Contamination Analysis

    Oil contamination may be defined as any foreign material found in the lubricant which is not added by design. Usually, contaminants are not beneficial, and may be detrimental, to the performance of the oil and/or the operating machinery. Read More

  • How to Select Machines for Oil Analysis

    How to Select Machines for Oil Analysis

    By Jim FitchMachinery Lubrication Magazine A few years ago, someone mentioned to me that many of his machines were not good candidates for oil analysis because they used little oil that wasn’t worth saving. He added that by the time you flushed the sampling port and pulled a proper oil sample, you’ve almost done an Read More

  • Optimizing Lubrication and Lubricant Analysis

    Optimizing Lubrication and Lubricant Analysis

    Lubrication is an unmistakably integral part of machine reliability. Rotating machines are dependent on lubrication decisions made, such as which lubricant to use, how the lubricant needs to be applied to the tribological zones, and what is done during operations to monitor and control the integrity of these frictional zones. Read More

  • The Power of Root Cause Pre-failure Analysis

    The Power of Root Cause Pre-failure Analysis

    Abnormal wear is not like a bad rash, which tends to go away on its own in time. Instead, it’s more like early-stage cancer, which requires intervention and treatment. Oil analysis has exceptional abilities to detect abnormal conditions, both root cause (like dirty oil) and predictive (active failure in progress). Read More

  • In Search of a Definition – What is Oil Analysis?

    In Search of a Definition – What is Oil Analysis?

    The term “oil analysis” has been used with respect to lubrication and machine reliability since the 19th century. Yet, over the years I have seen only a few attempts to assign a specific definition to the activity despite its widespread application in industry. Most of these definitions are too narrow or fail to include important… Read More

  • Listen to Your Lubricant

    Listen to Your Lubricant

    Arguably, more change has occurred related to lubricant analysis and condition monitoring in the past 30 years than all other areas of lubrication. Why does this make sense? The wisest among us know that relentless measurement is a key enabler to forward progress and change. Measurement leads us to awareness and finally to action (tangible… Read More

  • Oil Analysis Effectively Uncovers Hidden Problems

    Oil analysis is about surfacing problems that were otherwise hidden from view. We’ve all heard the phrase “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it,” but an important corollary is “if it is broke, fix it fast.” The basic problem with this strategy is not knowing when something is actually broken. Read More