Definition
In short: industrial preventive maintenance means servicing equipment on a planned schedule — inspections, lubrication, wear-part replacement — before a breakdown happens, instead of repairing under pressure once the line is already down.
We still see it regularly in Saguenay plants. A critical piece of equipment fails without warning, production stops, and the entire team mobilizes to locate the replacement part, which, of course, is not in stock. The cost? Between overtime, rush-ordered parts and lost production, the bill adds up fast.
That is exactly what preventive maintenance aims to eliminate. Instead of waiting for the breakdown, we analyze every equipment component, identify critical parts, and schedule interventions before problems arise. Inspections, lubrication, scheduled replacement of wear parts, calibration: everything is set up so the machine keeps running and no one is called in for an emergency on a Sunday morning.
At Préven-Tech, we've been doing this since 1989. We started with vibration analysis in the Saguenay smelters, and it's still in our DNA today.
Why it works: the data
After 35 years in the field, we don't need to convince anyone. But the studies confirm what we see in plants. Here's what it looks like when you put numbers on it.
Annual maintenance-related costs in U.S. manufacturing.
Source: NIST AMS 100-18
Reduction in unplanned downtime and 78.5% fewer defects compared to reactive mode.
Source: PMC / NIST study
Every dollar invested in preventive maintenance saves an average of five dollars in future repairs. Reactive maintenance costs 3 to 5 times more.
Source: industry meta-analyses
Average cost of unplanned downtime in the manufacturing sector.
Source: industry studies
The conclusion is clear: every dollar in prevention saves five in emergency repairs. And that doesn't even account for lost production, safety risks, and the wear that breakdowns inflict on neighbouring equipment. One of our clients in the aluminum sector was still running in reactive mode in 2018. Fourteen months into a structured preventive program, their unplanned downtime dropped 47%. The worst culprit? A $180 fan bearing. Every time it failed, it shut down an entire line for 6 hours.
Key components of an effective program
Putting inspections on a calendar is a start. But a program that actually lasts takes quite a bit more than that:
Detailed equipment analysis
We go through every component with a fine-tooth comb: current condition, failure history, criticality to production. This is the foundation for everything else.
Critical parts identification
Which parts are critical? Are they available? What is the lead time? If the answer is "8 weeks," we order now, not when it breaks.
Customized maintenance programs
Every machine has its own operating conditions. The intervention schedule reflects the reality of your plant, not just the manufacturer's manual.
Performance reports and codification
Every intervention is documented. Over time, this database becomes your technical memory, essential for making the right decisions. We have learned over the years that codification is the real secret. At a mining site on the Côte-Nord, we codified over 3,200 parts in 4 months. Before that, technicians were losing an average of 45 minutes per intervention just looking for the right part in the warehouse.
Work orders and parts procurement
When the technician arrives, the work order is ready and the parts are there. No time wasted searching, no unnecessary inventory sitting on shelves.
Preventive vs. reactive vs. predictive
We are often asked about the difference between these three approaches. The table speaks for itself:
| Reactive | Preventive | Predictive | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Approach | Fix it when it breaks | Scheduled interventions | Based on real-time data |
| Relative cost | 3-5x more expensive | Baseline | 18-25% less than preventive |
| Downtime | High (+52.7%) | Reduced | Minimal |
| Complexity | Low | Medium | High (sensors, AI) |
| Best for | Non-critical equipment | Most industrial assets | Very high-value assets |
In practice, the best-performing plants use a blend of all three, depending on the criticality of each piece of equipment. But preventive maintenance remains the backbone. It is the accessible foundation for companies of all sizes, without requiring a massive technology investment.
The Préven-Tech approach
Our planners know the technical files of your machines. They order the right parts at the right time and prepare precise work orders, so that when the technician shows up, everything is there. No last-minute urgency, no surprises. That is how we have been working at Rio Tinto, ArcelorMittal, Niobec and in the region's forestry plants for over 35 years.
And thanks to our shared services model, even Saguenay SMEs can access this expertise without hiring a full-time planner. Whether it is for an initial audit, building a complete program, or reinforcing the team during peak periods, we adapt to your reality, not the other way around.
Sources and references
- NIST AMS 100-18. The Costs and Benefits of Advanced Maintenance in Manufacturing. National Institute of Standards and Technology.
- PMC (2023). Maintenance Costs and Advanced Maintenance Techniques in Manufacturing Machinery. PubMed Central.
- PeerJ Computer Science (2024). Predictive maintenance in Industry 4.0.
- MDPI (2022). On Predictive Maintenance in Industry 4.0: Overview, Models, and Challenges.