This is a very difficult thing to compare between sites. We are currently running about 50 months between failures on our pumps. The population at our plant is probably 80 percent API. In the past our management has attempted to compare our MTBF to other refineries. These comparisons almost always make us look like we are doing worse than we are. By attending conferences like the Pump Users Symposium, I have found a great number of definitions of a failure (or repair).
It is very common to exclude adjustments that require no parts. So some plants only include workorders with materials costs. In that same category, there are plants that set a minimum dollar value for a workorder to count as a failure. In those, they might exclude any workorder with a total cost less than $500 or even $1000. The most extreme case I ever heard of was a plant that set up bonuses for their mechanics based on improvements in their MTBF. This plant only counted failures if the pump had to be brought into the shop for repair. If it could be fixed in the field, it was not counted. Since the mechanics had a bonus tied to the measure, they got creative. They mounted vices on the backs of their trucks and started doing full pump overhauls in the field so they didn't count.
Some plants count failures of the driver as part of the pump train. Some count turbine failures but not motors (since the electrical group is counting those). Some count problems with gearboxes, lube skids, mechanical seal support systems (seal coolers, pots, etc.) and some do not. Some include the piping up to the first block valve. Some exclude anything beyond the pump flange. Some plants wait until the Root Cause Failure Analysis is complete. If the RCFA indicates that the failure was caused by something the operators did (such as run the pump dry), they don’t count it. Some exclude bearing failures if the were found by vibration analysis.
We have taken an extremely conservative approach. If someone believe they have a problem with a pump, they enter a workorder, a mechanic goes out to the unit and gets a work permit and touches the pump, even for the most minor adjustment, it is a failure. Even if he did not replace a part, even if the problem was operational (low tank level) we still count it as a failure. If vibration detects a bearing that is failing, we still count it. We do not count driver failures (motor or turbine). We do not count piping problems outside the pump block valves. Overall, this is a harsh way to judge pump reliability. But it allows no room for fudging. The engineer who generates the scorecard has very little leeway to exclude workorders that have mechanic labor billed to them. But this way at least we are consistent.
So if others chime in with MTBF’s much greater than 50 months, I would be interested in hearing how they define a failure.
Determine a consistent definition of a failure. Determine your baseline reliability for the past 4 or 5 years. And then evaluate whether your reliability is going up or down. Getting a fair comparison to others (or any industry standard) is problematic, at best.