In many garment factories and stitching units, machine maintenance is often postponed until a breakdown happens. While this approach may appear cost-effective in the short term, the long-term impact on production and expenses tells a very different story. Understanding the preventive maintenance cost versus reactive repair spending helps businesses make better operational decisions.
This article explains the real sewing machine repair economics and why planned maintenance is usually the more practical and profitable approach.
What Preventive Maintenance Really Means
Preventive maintenance involves routine machine care carried out before problems occur. For industrial sewing machines, this typically includes:
Regular cleaning to remove lint and dust
Scheduled lubrication of moving parts
Checking timing, alignment, and thread tension
Replacing worn components in advance
Inspecting electronic and sensor systems in modern machines
These activities involve a controlled and predictable preventive maintenance cost, making it easier for production teams to plan ahead.
The Economics of Preventive Maintenance vs. Reactive Repairs > https://www.kazze.in/blogs/news/the-economics-of-preventive-maintenance-vs-reactive-repairs
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