Maintenance professionals hold tremendous responsibility. As the safeguards of plant equipment, they’re caring for massive investments, preventing costly downtime, avoiding potentially catastrophic environmental hazards, and protecting the health and lives of countless individuals who work within plant walls.
Imagine a world where you can monitor the health of nearly all plant machinery and make intelligent maintenance decisions based on real-time data. This scenario is today’s reality. The next evolution in predictive maintenance strategy will be a transition to nimble and accurate real-time condition monitoring of an entire industrial facility.
Today, a single enterprise solution is available to monitor the health of our critical and supporting machinery alike. The “eagle-eye view” data collected from a plant-wide condition monitoring system empowers plant reliability managers to make informed proactive decisions about individual machine maintenance, provides a holistic view of the health of their interconnected factory equipment, and helps to better predict potential downtime. It can also improve overall plant ROI and decrease risk associated with reactive, outdated and spotty maintenance techniques.
Making the transition from critical-only condition monitoring to a plant-wide approach has the potential to elevate a plant to best-in-class status. A fully integrated and modern plant increases the level of sophistication, productivity, and reliability for the entire industrial maintenance field. Register today to learn how you can make a case for Plant-Wide Condition Monitoring.
Webinar and Live Q&A:
Plant-Wide Solutions
A Bently Nevada Overview
When:
Date: August 26th, 2020
Time: 11:00 am CST
*Note: If the time zone isn’t suitable, register to receive an On Demand link to watch it at your own pace.
Where:
Location: at your desk
This presentation will address:
Senior Product Manager
Bently Nevada, a Baker Hughes business
Chris is the Senior Product Line Manager for Bently Nevada sensors. He is responsible for new developments and lifecycle management within the Bently Nevada sensor portfolio for both wired and wireless solutions. His 20+ years with the business have included roles within engineering, project management and leadership, and business acquisitions.
Chris is a graduate of Washington State University in Pullman, WA with a bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering.
Senior Product Manager
Bently Nevada, a Baker Hughes business
Bob is responsible for the overall lifecycle management of the Bently Nevada permanently installed wired condition monitoring and evaluation instrument portfolio. His first 20 years in the technology-based machinery condition monitoring and evaluation industry were as a Customer and end user. The more recent 20 have been as a field application engineer helping Customers achieve their reliability improvement objectives through the use of vibration monitoring technology. Having worked on machinery ranging from nuclear and fossil fueled to wind power generation, through cruise ship podded propulsion systems and locomotives, to paper machines to name just a few, he brings solid Customer focus to the product management role.
Bob is a graduate of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, in Troy, NY with a degree in Mechanical Engineering.
System 1 Technical Product Manager
Bently Nevada, a Baker Hughes business
As the System 1 Technical Product Manager, Jackie guides product vision and manages the ever-evolving backlog of features. She has led multi-country user research initiatives, collecting input from 300 unique end-users across 5 continents that has directly impacted the vision of the System 1 Platform. Jackie has a Master’s Degree in Human Systems Engineering from MIT, where she was formally trained in User Domain Analyses, Interaction Design, and Usability Testing.
Fill out the form below to receive access
Detailed information about how the personal data you have supplied is collected, stored and processed can be found in the Baker Hughes Privacy Notice . If you have opted in to receive marketing communications, you can withdraw your consent at any time by visiting the Baker Hughes Communications Preference Center , or by using the unsubscribe link found at the bottom of all emails from Baker Hughes.