Maintenance can either be planned and executed within the same plant where the requirement occurs, or it can involve cross-plant functions where different plants specialize in planning, execution, and spare parts. Cross-plant maintenance refers to situations where the maintenance is required in one plant, but other functions like planning, order execution, or spare parts storage are handled by workshops in different plants.
Maintenance can either be planned and executed within the same plant where the requirement occurs, or it can involve cross-plant functions where different plants specialize in planning, execution, and spare parts. Cross-plant maintenance refers to situations where the maintenance is required in one plant, but other functions like planning, order execution, or spare parts storage are handled by workshops in different plants.
Maintenance can either be planned and executed within the same plant where the requirement occurs, or it can involve cross-plant functions where different plants specialize in planning, execution, and spare parts. Cross-plant maintenance refers to situations where the maintenance is required in one plant, but other functions like planning, order execution, or spare parts storage are handled by workshops in different plants.
Maintenance plant = planning plant: In most organizational structures, the maintenance
requirement is planned in the same plant where it occurs (plant 1000), the maintenance orders are executed by workshops from the same plant, and the spare parts are stored in the same plant. Maintenance plant: Maintenance is required at plant 1200, where a technical system must be repaired (= maintenance plant), but all other functions (maintenance planning, order execution, spare parts warehouse) are performed by plant 1000. Alternatively, part (order execution) of the maintenance required is performed at plant 1300, but other functions (order planning, spare parts storage) are performed by other plants. The latter is cross-plant maintenance.