The impact of Onboard Maintenance Training on surface ship readiness.

Analysis of shipboard equipment failure generated by merging Navy casualty report and Unified Industries Onboard Maintenance Training (OMT) data bases demonstrate a measurable positive effect on reliability in those ships which participated in the program. When comparing equipment failure rates of t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Morris, Carl A., Whipple, David Richard
Other Authors: Whipple, David Richard
Language:en_US
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/22282
Description
Summary:Analysis of shipboard equipment failure generated by merging Navy casualty report and Unified Industries Onboard Maintenance Training (OMT) data bases demonstrate a measurable positive effect on reliability in those ships which participated in the program. When comparing equipment failure rates of these trained ships before and up to three years after the training event, over 70 percent of the time there was definite net positive effect. Eleven OMT courses, comprising 1176 shipboard training events over six years were examined. Equipment failure rates for trained units are compared before training with those for the three years following training. While the analytical results of this thesis present quantitative evidence of the positive effect of OMT on equipment readiness, this study also discusses the significant economic efficiency of the program as an alternative to contracted equipment repair. Keywords: Imbedded training, Ship readiness, Maintenance training, Training efficiency, Theses