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question

When a critical servo motor fails at 2 AM and the production manager is screaming about a $10k/hour downtime cost, what's your emergency triage protocol beyond just 'replace the motor'?

answer

Oh man, that's the nightmare scenario every maintenance team dreads! When the clock's ticking at $10k/hour, you need a systematic emergency triage protocol that goes way beyond just swapping parts. Here's what I'd do:

1. Immediate Safety & Communication: First, secure the area and notify the production manager you're on it. Get them to document the exact failure symptoms and any alarms that triggered.

2. Rapid Diagnostic Triage: Check power supply first - is the motor getting correct voltage? Then inspect the servo drive, communication signals, and encoder. Use a megger to check for ground faults between phases.

3. Controlled Shutdown Protocol: If it's truly critical, initiate a controlled emergency shutdown sequence using hard-wired, fail-safe connections (not network-dependent) to prevent cascade failures.

4. Parallel Path Activation: While troubleshooting, have someone check if there's a backup motor in inventory, and another team member contact emergency repair services. Don't wait on one solution.

5. Production Workaround Assessment: Can you bypass this section temporarily? Is there manual operation possible? Even at reduced capacity, partial production beats zero production.

6. Root Cause Investigation: Once stabilized, document everything for post-mortem analysis. What failed and why? This prevents the same $10k/hour crisis next time.

The key is having this protocol drilled in advance - because at 2 AM with a screaming manager, you don't have time to think, only to execute!

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