March-April 2010

Preventive Maintenance Pays Off

For loaders, "an ounce of prevention" can be as simple as a daily conversation with a driver, or as advanced as a computer program that tracks maintenance of a fleet.

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Photo: Autocar/Grand Vehicle Works

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By Peter Hildebrandt

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Those who work on loaders will tell you the “ounces of prevention” are worth a whole lot more than a cure that results in downtime on the road.

David Peck is fleet maintenance manager for Waste Industries, a private hauler headquartered in Raleigh, NC, with operation centers from Maryland to Georgia. Waste Industries operations run 30% residential, 30% commercial and 30% rolloff and industrial, with the last 10% in recycling, MRFs, and landfills.

The company’s rear-loader equipment has maintenance every day of the week, whether it’s a light out, a fuse blown on a cart tipper, or a hydraulic circuit. “There is always something going on with a residential truck,” says Peck. “Front loaders still have maintenance, but the frequency is less. Front loaders are in a far more stressful overall environment than the rear loader or the residential unit. With a commercial front loader you’re picking up an average of 6 cubic yards at a time. With a rear loader, you’re picking up a 95-gallon cart.”

The stress is significantly greater on a front loader than a rear loader, but residential picks up 10 times the cycles in the same given time. “In a 10-hour day, for instance, you will cycle a residential truck 600 to 900 times to a commercial front loader’s 60 to 100 times per day,” says Peck. “The cycles create the frequency of the repair, but the stress on the equipment creates the magnitude of the repair—absolutely. And that drives the costs up.”

Photo: E-Z Pack
Simplicity is key to E-Z Pack maintenance.

The company’s fleet includes not only residential and commercial trucks, but also industrial rolloffs and recycling trucks among their 850 vehicles. They have a mixture of something from nearly every manufacturer’s brand, year, model, style, and bodies.

Waste Industries’ maintenance starts off every morning before the driver heads out in the truck with a pre-trip inspection, as required by the company’s standards. At shift end DOT requires a walk-around inspection; WI takes that one step further and has a technician assist the driver in performing the vehicle condition report in their shop by a technician. Parking of the truck does not happen until driver and technician spend time communicating on any problems of the day.

From that, any DOT safety issues are taken care of first and then other work is done according to priorities. Nothing is left to chance. If a tire requires air two days in a row, it is changed.

In 30 years of doing maintenance in this industry, the one thing Peck has found as the common denominator has been this industry’s aggressiveness in moving toward new technology.

“But we keep effort hours to a minimum by talking with the driver,” says Peck. “Then we can prioritize, putting all our effort into making sure the truck is safe. Because of that we tend to do maintenance work on every truck every day.”

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In the past five years the company’s maintenance costs have either remained the same on a per-unit basis or have declined. Tire costs have declined as well, even though the number of units and mileage has increased. Their allowable downtime per truck is one-half of one percent.

The company has gone into super-extended oil-drain intervals, driven solely by oil analysis instead of on a given schedule, except as oil analysis requires. The Cleantechnics International filtration system installed on 90% of the vehicles has extended those oil-drain intervals up to two years. Next Page >

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