Glossary
of Terms
Accident,
Neglect and Abuse (ANA) Cost – Cost incurred related to
damage caused by operators, third parties, theft or vandalism.
Availability
–
A component of planned utilization which measure the amount of time a machine
was up and running and able to work [Planned Hours (P) – Down Time Hours (D)]
as a percentage of the planned time [Planned Hours (P)].
Average
External Hourly Shop / Field Rate - The average rate for your
external contract labor which is charged to your equipment. Do not include service
truck or mileage charges.
Average
Internal Hourly Shop/Field Rate – The company’s internal loaded
or standard rates - this rate is based on the complete budget for the shop and
equipment management and field positions charged to equipment. The costs
included in calculating this rate should be consistent with the definition
included in equipment maintenance and repair costs. The internal rate is
calculated by establishing the total costs budgeted for your shop and field
mechanics (numerator) divided by direct hours charged to equipment
(denominator). The vehicle costs for the field mechanic are separated as the
usual External Contractor charges a mileage rate in addition to the Standard
Rate.
Capital expenditures
– Represents the total cost capitalized during a period on the company’s
balance sheet to acquire equipment. Includes both fixed assets and right of
use assets under ASC 842 Leases.
Down Time Hours (D) - Used
in the determination of utilization. The machine is not working or producing
because of an unplanned equipment breakage or failure or planned maintenance
activities.
Down Events –
Unplanned or unexpected events that impact production that either did or did
not occur and this fact can easily and reliably be recorded in a work order or
time card coding system.
Down
Event Per 1,000 Hours – Metric that measures the effectiveness of
the maintenance enterprise in reducing undesirable, unplanned and unexpected on
shift breakdowns to the absolute minimum. It is a similar calculation to MTBF,
using many of the same inputs, but is stated as a down incident rate vs. the
hours between failures. The metric can be calculated at a unit, rate class or
fleet level. When calculated at a unit level, the metric is usually calculated
over the life to date of the machine.
Emergency
work hours – Maintenance that is needed when an asset
experiences an unexpected malfunction or change in condition that can cause
considerable threat to health, safety and environment or significant production
delays. The problem must be addressed as soon as possible (usually within 24-48
hours) hence the “emergency”.
Engine
Idling Percentage – A measure of the time that an engine is running
without performing a task. This statistic is derived from telematics or other
electronic information using algorithms to determine engine idle percent which
is communicated through the telematics platform being used. It is designed to
show the relationship between the period the machine and/or its engine is “at
idle” relative to the sum of the time the machine and/or its engine is “at
idle” plus the time the machine and/or its engine is “not idle”. It is measured
by dividing the total hours that the machine is reported “at idle” by
telematics by the total meter hours reported by telematics. Care must be used
when using this metric as results are produced by sensors and algorithms that
are often proprietary and vary by supplier, manufacturer and, in some cases, by
machine type. The engine idle percentage is best used to compare assets that
are performing similar tasks. By comparing similar assets that are performing
similar tasks one can establish baselines and develop plans and procedures for
improvement.
Equipment
Cost Components – Categories or cost “buckets” used to
establish the rates for equipment. The typical hierarchy includes ownership,
repair and maintenance, and fuel cost types.
Equipment
Damage Cost – The costs to repair/rebuild equipment or its
components for Accidents, Neglect & Abuse. This cost should not include
cost related to standard wear and tear or costs included in the composition of
the equipment rate. This cost also excludes repairs for damage charged to a
job, charged to a department or not covered by insurance.
Equipment
Hours Worked – The number of hours worked by machines
for a given period of time.
Equipment
Repairs and Maintenance Costs - Includes (1) all
equipment operating costs, including but not limited to, repair labor, service
truck/welder cost, repair parts, tires, wear items, outside repairs, supplies
and consumables; (2) repair labor, including labor, payroll taxes, burden
(e.g. health insurance, vacation, PTO, life and disability, etc) and
indirect/allocated shop overhead costs, (3) includes all equipment repair and
maintenance costs charged to equipment and jobs except Accident, Neglect and
Abuse (ANA), and Excludes (1) fuel and ownership costs and (2) costs
that are considered ANA (Accident, Neglect and Abuse) from equipment repair
& maintenance costs: damage caused by operators, third parties, theft or
vandalism.
Equipment
Repair & Maintenance Labor Cost (i.e. Repair
Labor) - The cost of both internal and outside labor. Internal labor costs
should include wages, payroll taxes, benefits, overhead [standard / fully
burdened rate]. Outside labor should include the labor portion of outside
repairs. This cost includes all repair and maintenance labor, including but
not limited to, internal shop, outside labor, construction field labor
performing repairs.
Estimated
Replacement Value – The amount an enterprise would need to spend
to replace its construction equipment assets at the present time (i.e. like kind
equipment replacement based upon its current age and condition). ERV is not
the cost to replace your fleet with new equipment. This metric includes (1)
owned fleet of equipment, (2) right-of-use financed assets (i.e. capitalized
leased equipment), and (3) includes construction equipment only (off-road and
on-road) and excludes fixed plant equipment or non-construction equipment.
Fleet Utilization
(Dollars Based) – Measures the degree to which a group of
machines working at a given location for a given time is able to generate the
internal job charges that could be generated if all the machines within that
group were to work at the desired or optimum level of utilization. It is
measured by dividing the total job charges actually generated by a group of
machines working at a given location for a given period by the total job
charges that could have been generated by that group of machines if they had
worked at optimum utilization for the given period.
Free Cash
Flow (FCF) – Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation
and Amortization (EBITDA).
Fuel Costs
– Represents
the cost of fuel, additives and delivery cost as well as diesel exhaust fluid
(DEF).
Inventory
turns – Metric used to measure efficiency in situations where
parts and consumables are kept in inventory for later use in repair and
maintenance activities. It is calculated by dividing the value or cost of parts
and consumables taken from inventory in a given period by the average value or
cost of inventory held over the period. The metric is often expressed in “days”
by dividing 365 days by the calculated number of inventories turns in the year.
Many published authors warn against the use of this metric in isolation because
it does not include any ability to measure the impact of stock outs from too
high a value and, significantly, does not include any way of determining how
much “dead stock” is included in inventory.
Labor
Factor – The ratio of maintenance labor hours charged to an asset
as compared to the asset’s hours for the same period.
Maintenance
Backlog – A list of
outstanding tasks that have been identified but not yet performed to repair or
maintain equipment. These tasks remain on the list and open until they are
completed. Backlogs are
measured by the estimated time it would take to complete all tasks on the list.
This value is most often calculated in man-weeks or work weeks for the number
of mechanic work weeks.
Maintenance
Schedule Compliance – Measures the percentage of work orders
completed by the due dates over a period, often within one week. It is
calculated by dividing the total number of work orders completed on-time within
an allocated allowance by the total number of work orders scheduled for that
period.
Maintenance
Training Hours – The number of hours maintenance personnel
spent in training (classroom, seminars, workshops, in-house classes). Training
that develops maintenance personnel in their role or will benefit them in
future roles. This does not include safety and compliance regulatory training.
Mean
Time Between Failure (MTBF) – A reliability metric that
measures the effectiveness of the maintenance enterprise in reducing
undesirable, unplanned and unexpected on shift breakdowns to the absolute
minimum. MTBF is the average time between system breakdowns and is defined by
the number of hours reported or metered during a period divided by number of
breakdowns.
Net
Book Value of Fixed Assets – Represents the original cost of an asset
less its accumulated depreciation in accordance with Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles (GAAP).
Net
Income Before Taxes – The company’s income before income taxes.
Net
Working Capital – The difference between current assets and
current liabilities.
Ownership Costs – Depreciation,
lease payments for right of use assets under ASC 842, equipment rental expense
(including taxes and fees), insurance, licenses, property taxes and interest.
Percentage
of Planned Equipment Utilization - is measured by dividing the
time machines is actually working (W) by the time machines are planned to work (P).
This metric is frequently broken down into two components, utilization and
availability.
Percentage
of corrective maintenance activity from Preventive Maintenance (PM)/Predictive
Maintenance (PdM) (%CP) – Corrective maintenance activity that
arose from a PM or PdM activity or inspections. The assumption is that if
proper PM and PdM is performed, issues or deficiencies should be surfaced that
need to be corrected.
Planned Hours (P) – Used
in the determination of utilization. The planned hours for a machine or group
of machines for a particular time period. Generally, this would represent the
budgeted hours in the annual hours budget or hours per year in the ownership
and operating rate calculation. If hours are budgeted by project, the hours for
that project for the year could be utilized.
Planned
maintenance – Preventive maintenance (PM) or corrective
maintenance that has been scheduled with labor and/or parts and labor. Planned
maintenance is determining the type of work required to resolve an issue and
how it must be done. Planned maintenance works to identify all the necessary
labor, items and materials needed to solve the issue. This includes equipment
inspections, ordering parts, gathering specialty tools, locating reference
documents, and prioritizing projects. High planned maintenance percentages
increase wrench time (productivity) and lowers reactive maintenance
(breakdowns).
Predictive
Maintenance (PdM) – A technique that uses data analysis tools and
techniques to detect anomalies in the operation and possible defects in
equipment so they can be fixed before resulting in a failure. Changes in the
condition are normally measured using technology or statistics. Predictive
maintenance tends to include direct measurement of the item.
Preventative
Maintenance (PM) – Represents all tasks that are routinely or
repetitively scheduled with the intent of prolonging the life of an asset.
Preventative
Maintenance (PM) Schedule Compliance – Measures the number
of PM tasks completed, on time, within an allocated allowance as compared to
the PM maintenance tasks scheduled.
Recordable
Incident - Any work-related injury and illness that results in death,
loss of consciousness, days away from work, restricted work activity, transfer
to another job, or medical treatment beyond first aid.
Return
on Net Assets (RONA) – A measure of financial performance which
demonstrates how well a company is deploying its assets to generate earnings.
It is measure by dividing Net Income Before Taxes by the sum of net working
capital and net book value of fixed assets.
Rework
–
Any task that requires the same repair within a month or 176 metered hours that
is not normally scheduled to be performed within the same period. In other
words, rework is repetitive
corrective (repair) work done on previously maintained equipment in a short
time. It is also referred to as callbacks.
Service
Level – The opposite of stockout. It is the percent of attempts for stocked items that are
fulfilled without delay. They are measured by parts pick tickets attempted.
Shop Total
Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR) - Examination of the number of
total recordable incidents compared to the number of total hours worked by shop
employees in a single year.
Stockouts
– Parts
in the inventory management system that should be on the storeroom shelf, but
are unable to be located.
Throughput
Costs – A strategic accounting technique used to manage and
measure production costs. Throughput cost is determined by the following
equation: Total Construction Revenues – Material Costs – Subcontract Costs
Total
Construction Revenue - The value of all services recognized under
construction contracts by a company in a period.
Total Equipment
Cost – The sum of ownership costs, repair and maintenance cost
and fuel cost.
Total
Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR) - The number of recordable
incidents per 100 full-time workers during a one-year period.
Utilization
–
Measurement of the time a machine is working relative to the time it is on
site, expected to work and able to work. The calculations involved in
determining utilization are based on the operating status of a machine.
Working
Hours (W) – Used in the determination of utilization. The time that a
machine that is on-site, able to work and is being used to complete required
work.
Work
order labor capture - Includes all maintenance labor hours
captured against a work order versus assigned to a cost center or other
allocation.
Wrench
Time
– The total time a technician spends diagnosing, adjusting, repairing, or
servicing an asset (value-added). It does NOT include time spent traveling to
and from the job, training, in meetings, breaks, paperwork, travel to parts room,
cleaning work area, etc. (non-value added but needed) It is most often
determined by a Work Sampling Study or Day in Life Of (DILO).