Key takeaways
Condition-based maintenance means you watch a measurable indicator of an asset's health and act when it degrades, not when the calendar says so. A bearing's vibration creeping up, a motor running hot, a pressure drifting out of band: each is a condition signal that triggers maintenance before the asset fails, but no sooner than necessary.
The logic is that most components do not fail on a neat schedule; they show signs first. CBM catches those signs and converts them into timely, targeted work.
The three are often confused:
CBM is the practical middle ground: it needs real measurements but not a full predictive model.
CBM earns its cost on assets where three things hold: the asset is important enough that failure hurts (see asset criticality analysis), the degradation is measurable with a sensor or inspection, and there is enough warning between the signal and the failure to act. On low-criticality assets with no measurable signal, run-to-failure is usually cheaper.
Fabrico connects condition signals and downtime events to the asset and its maintenance history, so a threshold breach can raise an alert and become a work order in the same system, with the event logged for analysis. It focuses on acting on measured condition and true-cause downtime rather than overselling forecasts. The closed path from detection to a tracked fix is covered in automatic downtime tracking. Fabrico is built and hosted in the EU with data residency in mind and is ISO 27001 certified. To act on condition rather than the calendar, book a demo.
For a practical next step, compare the leading options in our guide to the condition monitoring software.
Teams putting this into practice often review our roundup of the affordable CMMS software.
Preventive maintenance is done on a fixed schedule regardless of condition. Condition-based maintenance is triggered by a measured indicator crossing a threshold, so work happens when the asset's actual state calls for it rather than on the calendar.
No. Condition-based maintenance reacts to the present measured condition. Predictive maintenance goes further, using trends and models to forecast when a failure will occur. CBM needs measurements but not a predictive model.
Whatever degradation signal precedes failure on that asset: vibration, temperature, pressure, current draw, or periodic inspection readings. The signal only helps if it gives enough warning to act before failure.
Critical assets with a measurable degradation signal and enough lead time between the signal and failure to respond. Low-criticality assets with no measurable signal are usually cheaper to run to failure.