Four Risks You Might Be Taking with Aging Machines

Industrial Standardization: The Fastest Way to Cut Downtime

Most downtime isn’t caused by major failures.  It’s caused by inconsistency: different platforms, different diagnostics, different parts, different ways to do the same repair.

That friction adds time at every step of a failure — even when the failure itself is minor.

Standardization is one of the lowest‑risk ways to reduce downtime because it attacks time to recovery, not just failure rates.

What mixed platforms really cost you

Mixed systems usually don’t cause more breakdowns. They cause slower recoveries.

Every additional platform means:

  • Different fault messages
  • Different software
  • Different spare parts
  • Different manuals
  • Different training

Most plants track this as MTTR (Mean Time To Repair) — the total average time it takes to restore a system after a failure.

That includes detection, diagnosis, repair, and restart, not just the physical fix.

A common example:

A simple I/O fault shuts down a line.
The repair itself takes 15 minutes.

Total downtime is closer to 90 minutes — because:

  • The HMI behaves differently than the rest of the plant
  • The alarm wording isn’t familiar
  • The spare is stored somewhere else
  • Verification takes longer than expected

The hardware wasn’t the problem.
The inconsistency was.

That lost time shows up as:

  • Longer line stops
  • More escalation calls
  • Heavy dependence on a few individuals
  • Painful off‑shift failures

None of this appears on a BOM — but all of it shows up as downtime.

How standardization reduces MTTR

Standardization doesn’t stop failures. It shrinks the problem when something fails.

When systems are consistent:

  • Faults are recognized faster
  • Root causes are easier to isolate
  • Spare parts are already on the shelf
  • Repairs follow familiar patterns
  • Restarts are more predictable

Most uptime gains come from reducing MTTR, not eliminating every failure.

Standardization directly reduces the biggest time losses:

  • Diagnosis time
  • Part sourcing time
  • Verification and restart time

You’re not repairing faster —
you’re figuring it out faster.

OEM priorities vs. maintenance reality

This is where many standardization efforts stall. OEMs often optimize for:

  • Performance
  • Features
  • Machine‑specific designs

Maintenance teams need:

  • Serviceability
  • Parts availability
  • Predictable troubleshooting

Both perspectives matter — problems start when only one wins.

Downtime increases when:

  • OEM designs are scaled without maintenance input
  • Plants standardize on performance, not supportability
  • Complexity is inherited instead of chosen

Good standards balance both:

  • OEM repeatability
  • Maintenance efficiency

What to standardize first (and what not to)

Start where standardization removes decision‑making under pressure. Good places to start:

  • Control platforms and HMIs
  • Power distribution components
  • Network architecture and addressing
  • Panel layout and labeling
  • Spare part families

Be more selective with:

  • Application‑specific logic
  • Specialized motion or safety functions
  • Processes that truly require customization

Standardization isn’t about eliminating engineering judgment.
It’s about reducing variation that doesn’t add value.

How to standardize without stopping production

This doesn’t require rip‑and‑replace. What works:

  • Apply standards to new installations first
  • Align spare parts before changing designs
  • Standardize during planned shutdowns
  • Let legacy systems age out intentionally

The goal is momentum — not disruption.

Bottom line

If downtime is frequent or unpredictable, standardization is often the fastest improvement you can make without increasing risk.

Review platforms, spares, and service patterns. The quick wins are usually obvious — and repeatable.

Start the Conversation

If you want to begin a conversation around modernization at your facility, reach out to your Standard Electric Account Manager or our Technical Specialists at SE Automation. They can help you evaluate risk, prioritize upgrades, and plan modernization in a way that supports real operational goals.

SOURCES

The concepts in this article align with widely accepted maintenance, reliability, and asset‑management practices used across industrial manufacturing.

  1. PreventiveHQ — MTTR: Mean Time To Repair
    Used for the practical definition of MTTR and its components (detection, diagnosis, repair, and restart).
    https://preventivehq.com/blog/mttr-mean-time-to-repair/
  2. TÜV SÜD — Risk‑Based Inspection and Maintenance
    Supports the focus on recovery speed and maintainability as key drivers of uptime, not just failure prevention.
    https://www.tuvsud.com/en-sg/-/media/regions/sg/brochures-and-infosheets/is/risk-based-inspection-and-maintenance.pdf
  3. ISO 55000:2024 — Asset Management: Overview and Principles
    Provides lifecycle guidance for aligning design, installation, and operational decisions with long‑term maintainability.
    https://www.iso.org/standard/83053.html
  4. NFPA 70B — Standard for Electrical Equipment Maintenance
    Reinforces the role of consistent equipment, documentation, and maintenance practices in reliability and safety.

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