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P‑M Analysis Step 3: Identify Constituent Conditions
In the third step of P‑M analysis we identify all constituent conditions, or conditions that are either necessary or sufficient to bring about the phenomenon. Learn the five activities for identifying constituent conditions, the questions we ask at each stage, and how we use the 4M factors to study the equipment functions thoroughly.
Course Videos
What Is P-M Analysis?
04:11
2Getting Started with P-M Analysis
05:34
3How to Reduce Chronic Losses
07:49
4P-M Analysis Step 1: Clarify the Phenomenon
07:26
5P-M Analysis Step 2: What Is a Physical Analysis?
04:36
6P-M Analysis Step 2: How to Conduct a Physical Analysis
08:15
7P-M Analysis Step 2: How to Draw a Process Diagram
04:03
Current Video
P-M Analysis Step 3: Identify Constituent Conditions
09:20
Next VideoP-M Analysis Step 4: Study the Relevance of 4M Factors
06:02
10P-M Analysis Step 5: Define Optimal Conditions
05:46
11P-M Analysis Step 6: Study Investigation and Measurement Methods
03:15
12P-M Analysis Step 7 Identify Deviations from Optimal Conditions
03:26
13P-M Analysis Step 8 Draft and implement corrective action plan
05:04
14How to Sustain the Results of P-M analysis
07:59
15How to Use a P-M Analysis Storyboard
04:41
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