Mean Time Between Failures
MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) is the gold standard indicator for measuring the reliability of a repairable asset. It represents the average time between one repaired failure and the next incident on the same equipment.
Simplified Formula: (Total Operating Time) / (Number of Failures)
A high MTBF is a good sign: it means the system runs correctly for a long time without interruptions. A low MTBF indicates instability and constant failures.
MTBF answers the most important financial question: Is it worth continuing to repair this or is it time to buy a new one? If an LED luminaire has a decreasing MTBF (breaking down more and more frequently), the cost of sending a crew to repair it will quickly exceed the cost of replacing it with a new one. Without this data, companies throw money at endless repairs of obsolete equipment.
In urban maintenance, failure is not always the equipment's fault; sometimes it's the environment's fault. Maptainer allows you to visualize MTBF on the map. This reveals hidden patterns that a spreadsheet cannot show.
Example: If you see a very low MTBF on all streetlights on a specific street, the problem isn't the bulbs, but probably a voltage surge on the line or a structural problem in that area. Maptainer helps you diagnose the root cause by analyzing the geographic distribution of failures.
Back to glossaryDiscover how Maptainer can help you implement maintenance management best practices.