Operators know the equipment. Supervisors know the schedule. Superintendents know the budget. And every one of them knows what happens when a critical piece of treatment equipment fails out of nowhere. Everything else stops.
Scheduled maintenance is one of the cheapest tools you have to keep that from happening. It also tends to be the first thing that gets pushed when the plant is running fine, the budget is tight, or the team is short. That's exactly when it matters most.
Reactive maintenance feels cheaper at the budget meeting. On the actual repair, it isn't. When a flocculator drive seizes, a plate settler stops discharging, or a bearing locks up mid-cycle, the replacement part is a small piece of what you pay.
The rest of the bill:
A scheduled program turns those unknowns into planned work on your calendar. The cost shows up as a line item you saw coming, not a phone call at 2 AM.
Three things come from a strong program, and you get them whether you notice or not.
Steady performance. Treatment equipment hits its numbers when it's clean, calibrated, and lubricated. A worn paddle wheel bearing or a fouled scum pipe doesn't fail loudly. It drags efficiency down quietly until your plant data starts to drift.
A team that isn't firefighting. Predictable maintenance windows mean operators run their routine work without getting pulled off for emergencies. Over time, that changes the culture of the plant.
A capital plan with real numbers. When you have a clear read on equipment condition, you can budget rehab and replacement years ahead. You stop scrambling for emergency capital every time something fails.
Working with municipal plants across the country, we see the same gaps over and over:
These aren't effort problems. They're structure problems. They're fixable.
A scheduled maintenance program for a treatment plant should cover:
Doesn't matter whether you're running Mega-SETTLER plate settlers, Mega-FLOC flocculators, or legacy JMS gear that's been in service for decades. The principle is the same. Equipment that gets measured and maintained outlasts equipment that just gets watched.
JMS designed and built much of what's running in plants across the country. That means we know your equipment from the drawings up, not from a service manual we downloaded. Our Aftermarket team works with operators, supervisors, and superintendents to build maintenance programs that hold up in the field, including:
The goal is to be part of the solution year-round, not just the call you make when something breaks.
A JMS site assessment gives you a hands-on read of your installed equipment and a plan you can take to the budget meeting.
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