Quote:
| Originally Posted by K1W1 read the books for each piece of equipment and jot down the maintenance routines listed there, you can adapt these as time goes on to suit your particular operation/application |
I am a captain that does engineering, not a licensed engineer, but what K1W1said is what I do. I put the maintenance info in an excel file and check it off, with the subsequent details, for each job. If I quit or get the flick the next captain knows everything that has been done and does not waste time and money. Items that need attention are written in another spreadsheet with the details. I write down notes for the whole boat, when I changed water filters, where I took on fuel, what was fixed on the davit, etc.. in one workbook. The other workbook has services done to the generators, mains, trannys, where and how much fuel was taken on, and other engine room notes.
I hope this helps. If you are looking to take advantage of someone on this site you are barking up the wrong tree (the members of this site were born at night, but not last night), if you are legitimate you will get a much better reception on the site if you tell us about yourself, interests, boat you work on, and what you plan on doing with the information. On the other hand, if you are who you say you are, "i m a young chief," and don't know what the "typical maintenance schedule of engine room in a yacht" is I am scared for the future of our industry.
nas