LAMP - Lukhozi Asset Management Program
LAMP is a Computerized Maintenance Management System (CMMS) that is
used as a tool to assist maintenance managers in the following industries or
environments:
-
Hospitals
-
Local Municipalities
-
Facilities Management
-
Fleet Management
-
Heavy Engineering Works
-
Production plants
The functionality of the system is described briefly here (PDF document).
Hospitals
The system can assist in the maintenance of the following areas in a hospital:
- buildings (walls, roof, flooring, lifts, etc)
- steam and related equipment (boilers, autoclaves, etc)
- airconditioning equipment (chillers, window units, mortuary cabinets, etc)
- kitchen equipment (shredders, fridges, coldrooms, etc)
- laundry equipment (washers, ironers, etc)
- other equipment (incinerators, garbage compactors, etc)
- clinical instruments and equipment (monitors, theatre equipment, etc)
- lighting (theatre lights, dental lights, etc)
- roads and gardens (mowing, sweeping, etc)
- fencing (alarms, electric fences, etc.)
Local Municipalities
The system can store asset information for a local municipality and assist in:
- building an asset list (GAMAP)
- maintaining reticulation systems (electricity, water, etc)
- locating equipment (GPS coordinates)
- tracking reported problems till resolution
Facilities Management
The system can be used for facilities management in office parks or shopping centres
and assist in the following areas:
- maintenance of buildings and infrastructure
- tracking problems (where? and why?)
- followup on customer complaints
- manage contracts for specific items (eg. airconditioning maintenance)
Fleet Management
All vehicles in a fleet can be managed by the system in the following ways:
- register of all vehicles
- licensing reminders and information
- regular maintenance based on hours worked or kilometers travelled
- full service history recorded for each vehicle
Heavy Engineering Works
In this type of facility the system can assist with:
- statuatory inspections (lifting equipment, pressure vessels, etc)
- downtime recording
- failure analysis
- equipment hierarchies
- functional locations
- rotable parts tracking
Production Plants
The availability of the production plant can be maximized by using the system to:
- regularly maintain equipment according to manufacturers recommendations
- do condition based maintenance and repairs in a planned manner
- manage a parts store (purchasing, issues and returns)
- ensure parts are available when required
- identify failure trends and implement corrective measures
- staff skill requirements checking