Onsite machining is usually the better option when a component can be restored to specification in place, when replacement means long lead times or high cost, and when downtime has to be kept to a minimum. Replacement makes more sense when damage is beyond repair, the part is obsolete, or safety requires a new component.
Every worn or damaged component eventually raises the same question: repair it, or replace it. For rotating equipment, flanges and machined surfaces, the answer is rarely automatic. The right choice depends on the condition of the part and the cost of being without it.
Four factors decide it:
| Factor | Repair (onsite machining) | Full replacement |
|---|---|---|
| Downtime | Often hours to days, in place | Days to weeks, incl. removal and refit |
| Lead time | Mobilise equipment to site | Manufacture or source, then deliver |
| Cost | Machining labour and equipment | New component, freight, installation |
| Transport risk | None, asset stays in place | Handling and reassembly risk |
| Best when | Component is repairable to spec | Damage is beyond repair or part is obsolete |
Onsite machining is often the stronger choice for wear and surface damage that has not compromised the underlying component. Because BLJ In-situ Solutions brings the workshop to the plant, the repair happens where the asset sits.
Typical cases where repair wins include:
Repair is not always the right answer, and BLJ will say so when it is not. Replacement is the better option when the component’s structural integrity is compromised, when corrosion or cracking has gone too far to machine out safely, when the part is obsolete and no longer supported, or when a specification or safety requirement calls for a new item. In those cases, machining a worn part only delays a failure.
The headline price of a repair is only part of the picture. The larger cost is usually downtime, and this is where onsite machining services change the maths.
On a recent job, BLJ machined both worn 175mm journals on a mobile crusher shaft in place and matched the pulleys to the final machined size. That restored correct alignment, returned the machine to service and eliminated the need for a costly shaft replacement. The full write-up is in our journal turning of a mobile crusher shaft project, and our comprehensive guide to onsite machining covers the disciplines involved.
BLJ assesses the component’s condition against the tolerances it has to meet, then weighs repair against replacement on cost, lead time and downtime for that specific asset. Where machining can return the part to specification and preserve its integrity, that is usually the recommendation. Where it cannot, we say so.
That assessment is backed by an ISO 9001:2015 quality system, so the repair is measured and documented, not a guess. It is the same approach we apply when integrating onsite machining into planned maintenance. To talk through a specific component, contact the BLJ team or call 07 3245 2203.
In most cases, yes. BLJ In-situ Solutions can machine a worn shaft or journal back to specification onsite, which avoids the cost of a new component, freight and reinstallation, and it keeps downtime shorter. Replacement only becomes the cheaper option when the shaft is cracked, bent or otherwise damaged beyond what machining can safely correct.
Onsite machining lets BLJ In-situ Solutions repair the component where it sits, so there is no removal, transport, waiting for a replacement, or reassembly. This can take a repair from weeks down to hours or days, which is why onsite machining is often the better option when production cannot be spared for long.
Replace a component when its structural integrity is compromised, when corrosion or cracking is too advanced to machine out safely, or when the part is obsolete. BLJ In-situ Solutions will recommend replacement in these cases rather than machining a part that is likely to fail again.
Yes. BLJ In-situ Solutions regularly performs repair machining, flange facing and controlled bolting inside planned shutdown and turnaround windows, mobilising portable equipment to the plant. This lets clients complete restorations within the shutdown rather than extending downtime to wait on replacement parts.