ISO 18436 is the international standard that certifies the people who run a condition monitoring programme, not the machines they watch. Its best-known part, ISO 18436-2, defines four categories of vibration analyst, and knowing the levels helps you staff a reliability programme with the right expertise at each step.
ISO 18436 sets the training, experience and examination requirements for personnel in condition monitoring and diagnostics of machines. Separate parts cover the different technologies: vibration (18436-2), thermography, acoustic emission, lubricant analysis and ultrasound. Certification is issued by accredited bodies against a defined body of knowledge, so a Category II vibration analyst means the same thing from one employer to the next.
Each category requires progressively more training hours and documented field experience, plus a passing exam, before it is awarded.
A condition monitoring programme lives or dies on interpretation. The same ISO 10816-3 vibration severity reading can be read as a bearing fault, a balance problem or a resonance depending on who looks at the spectrum. Certified analysts reduce false alarms and missed faults, which is the difference between predictive maintenance that pays back and the ones that do not, as covered in why most predictive maintenance ROI cases are wrong.
Certification builds the skill; a platform builds the coverage. Even a Category IV analyst cannot walk every machine every day, so continuous monitoring handles the routine watching and flags the machines that need an expert eye. Fabrico reads machine condition from the line and raises a work order automatically when a trend crosses a limit, so certified analysts spend their time on diagnosis rather than data collection. Book a Fabrico demo to see it, and compare techniques in thermography vs vibration analysis.
It certifies the competence of people who perform condition monitoring and machine diagnostics, setting the training, experience and exam requirements for each level and technology.
Category II analysts perform spectral analysis, diagnose common machine faults such as unbalance, misalignment and bearing wear, and set alarm limits. It is the level most plant analysts hold.
No. ISO 18436-2 covers vibration, but other parts certify thermography, lubricant analysis, acoustic emission and ultrasound personnel under the same framework.
It is not always legally required, but certification sharply improves diagnosis quality and reduces false alarms, which is what makes a programme pay back.