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Maintenance Engineer vs Reliability Engineer: Fixing vs Preventing

Maintenance Engineer vs Reliability Engineer: Fixing vs Preventing

A maintenance engineer keeps equipment running today. A reliability engineer makes failures rarer over time. Why conflating the two stalls both.
Maintenance Engineer vs Reliability Engineer: Fixing vs Preventing
Maintenance Engineer vs Reliability Engineer: Fixing vs Preventing

Key takeaways

  • Maintenance engineering keeps equipment running now — repairs, PMs, work execution.
  • Reliability engineering reduces the rate of failure over time — root cause, design-out, strategy.
  • Conflating the roles means firefighting always wins and nothing gets permanently fixed.
  • Both feed on the same failure data; the reliability engineer turns it into fewer future failures.

Short answer: A maintenance engineer keeps equipment running today: executing repairs, PMs, and work orders. A reliability engineer makes failures rarer tomorrow: analysing failure modes, eliminating root causes, and setting maintenance strategy. When one person wears both hats, urgent always beats important and reliability work never happens. See also oee for manufacturing.

What the maintenance engineer owns

  • Work order execution and planning.
  • PM schedules and compliance.
  • Spare parts and repair quality.
  • Day-to-day uptime.

What the reliability engineer owns

  • Failure mode analysis (FMEA, RCA).
  • Maintenance strategy (RCM, criticality).
  • Bad-actor elimination.
  • Design-out and standardization.

Why the split matters

Maintenance is measured by speed of recovery; reliability by absence of failure. If the same person owns both, the pager always wins and the reliability backlog grows forever. Separating them protects the improvement work.

Shared data, different use

Both rely on the same CMMS failure history. The maintenance engineer uses it to plan the next repair; the reliability engineer uses it to ensure that repair is never needed again.

How OEE relates

Reliability work shows up as rising Availability and fewer breakdowns in OEE. Maintenance work shows up as faster recovery (lower MTTR). Track both to see the strategy paying off.

See how Fabrico captures this automatically on your lines — explore OEE for manufacturing or book a demo.

Related reading

Frequently asked questions

Can one person do both?

In small plants yes, but reliability work must be ring-fenced or it never happens.

Who owns RCM?

The reliability engineer, with maintenance input.

Does reliability replace maintenance?

No — it makes maintenance smaller and more planned over time.

What metric for reliability?

MTBF and failure rate trend; for maintenance, MTTR and PM compliance.

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