Corrective Maintenance is the technical activity aimed at correcting failures or breakdowns that have already occurred in equipment or installations. It is the most basic form of maintenance: the asset operates until it fails, and then intervention is made to repair or replace it.
It is often known as the "reactive" model or Run-to-Failure strategy. Although modern industry tries to minimize it, it will always exist, since it's impossible to predict 100% of incidents (accidents, vandalism, random failures).
Types of Corrective Maintenance
Not all breakdowns require rushing. We can distinguish two categories:
Immediate Corrective (Emergency): The breakdown is critical (e.g., an entire street in darkness, a dangerous exposed wire). It requires urgent action, without planning, interrupting other tasks. It's the most expensive and chaotic type.
Deferred Corrective (Scheduled): The asset is broken or malfunctioning, but it's not critical (e.g., a park bench with a broken plank). The fault is diagnosed, but repair is scheduled for later, allowing spare parts to be purchased calmly and optimizing the brigade's route.
The trap of operating only in "Corrective Mode"
Many organizations fall into the error of basing all their management on corrective maintenance ("if it works, don't touch it"). Although it seems to save costs in the short term (because you don't spend on preventive inspections), in the long term it's unsustainable:
Unpredictable Costs: Urgent breakdowns usually require overtime, urgent parts shipments, and non-optimized travel.
Shorter Lifespan: Poorly maintained equipment lasts fewer years, forcing reinvestment in new purchases ahead of time.
Poor Image: In public services, it means citizens always see broken things before the municipality fixes them.
From "Firefighting" to Efficient Management with Maptainer
The fact that a breakdown is unexpected doesn't mean its management should be chaotic. Maptainer transforms corrective maintenance into an orderly and digital process:
Citizen or Internal Report: The incident enters the system (via operator App or integration with municipal website).
Geographic Diagnosis: Before sending anyone, the manager sees on the map where the fault is. If there are 5 streetlights off together, they know it's a line fault and not a lamp issue.
Information to Technician: The operator receives the order on their mobile with the exact location and technical sheet of the asset. They know what tools to bring before leaving.
Post-Mortem Analysis: When closing the incident, Maptainer saves the reason for the failure. This allows trend analysis: "Why do we always do corrective work in this area?", helping transition to a smarter preventive model.
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