Equipment Downtime definition

Equipment Downtime means the period of time a piece of equipment is waiting for service to be completed. This time starts with the original service call into the Contractor and ends once all repairs, parts, installations, equipment modifications, configuration changes, or any prescribed work is completed and the Equipment functions according to the published specifications.
Equipment Downtime means the Covered Equipment is not functioning in substantial compliance with its specifications but shall not include time when the Covered Equipment is inoperable due to: (i) Excluded Causes; (ii) failure of a non-standard part; (iii) the use of the Equipment for training exercises; or (iv) the performance of preventative maintenance. Imagistics will make all necessary adjustments, repairs and parts replacement necessary to keep the Covered Equipment in good working order in accordance with its published specifications at no additional charge to PBMS or PBMS Customers, unless such adjustments, repairs or parts replacement are required due to: (i) the failure of PBMS or a PBMS Customer to operate the Covered Equipment under suitable temperature, humidity, line voltage, or any specified environmental conditions; (ii) the lack of reasonable care by PBMS or a PBMS Customer in handling, operating, and maintaining the Covered Equipment, including damage by misuse or malintent; (iii) the use of the Covered Equipment not in accordance with the agreed applications and for the ordinary purpose for which it is designed; (iv) any act or failure to act on the part of PBMS; (v) the use of non-approved accessories, materials or non-approved alterations or additions to the Covered Equipment, or the use of damaged materials, such as paper or envelopes; (vi) the use of the Covered Equipment in excess of its volume rating; (vii) malfunction of equipment, parts, components, or software provided by PBMS or third parties which interfaces with the Covered Equipment, or (viii) any loss or damage resulting from perils or casualty, including fire, water damage or other external cause; (all of the foregoing causes collectively the "Excluded Causes"). PBMS shall promptly notify Imagistics of any unauthorized alteration of, or addition to the Covered Equipment.
Equipment Downtime means the Equipment is not functioning in substantial compliance with its specifications, shall begin after the applicable Response Time, and shall not include time when the Equipment is inoperable due to: (i) Excluded Causes; (ii) failure of a non-standard part; (iii) the use of the Equipment for training exercises; or (iv) the performance of preventative Maintenance

Examples of Equipment Downtime in a sentence

  • If Lift Equipment is down longer than the acceptable amount of time specified above, the Excess Lift Equipment Downtime Liquidated Damages Formula below will determine the Contractor’s liability therefore, not as a penalty, but as liquidated damages.

  • Equipment Downtime The period of time that a Device is waiting for Service to be completed.

  • Equipment Downtime due to lack of consumable Supplies is not acceptable.

  • Equipment Downtime - Is defined as the period of time a piece of equipment is waiting for service to be completed.

  • For instance, Uzsoy, Lee, & Martin- Vega [62], and Bai & Gershwin [4], discussed six factors that are identified as linked to the complexity of this type of manufacturing process: (1) Complex Product Flows; (2) Random Yields; (3) Diverse Equipment Characteristics; (4) Equipment Downtime; (5) Production and Development in Shared Facilities; and (6) Data Availability and Maintenance.

  • Equipment Downtime Equipment downtime will be defined as the period of time a piece of equipment is waiting for service to be completed.

  • Excess Lift Equipment Downtime Liquated Damages (EEDLD) Formula: EEDLD = (contract yearly amount) x # of Lift Equipment out of service x Number of days out of service in excess Total Number of Lift Equipment of six Facility working days under this Contract Annual Working Days Example: Facility Y has 16 elevators.

  • TNF-α increases endothelial progenitor cell adhesion to the endothelium by increasing bond expression and affinity.

  • Table.19.Factors in Construction Equipment Downtime Source: Own Calculation The interview result also indicated that lack of spare part availability increase the downtime of equipment.

  • Kavouridis, "Determination of Equipment Downtime / Breakdown and Availability Coefficients for Continuous Surface Mining Systems", Proceedings, Fourth International Symposium on Mine Planning & Equipment Selection, 1995, Calgary, Alberta, pp.


More Definitions of Equipment Downtime

Equipment Downtime means the Equipment is not functioning in substantial compliance with its specifications, begins (during the Hours of Operation) from the time the Customer speaks to an authorized Pitney Xxxxx Service Representative about the malfunction to the Equipment, and does not include time when the Equipment is inoperable due to: (i) scheduled preventative maintenance and inspections; (ii) damage by misuse, malintent, casualty, or force majeure events; (iii) failure of Customer to perform, or cause to be performed, adequate preventative maintenance and inspections, including, without limitation proper cleaning, handling and servicing of the Equipment; (iv) use of damaged, improper, or non-Imagistics approved materials and supplies in the Equipment; (v) changes in incoming power beyond published specifications; (vi) maintenance or repairs required as a result of the Equipment being used in excess of the Hours of
Equipment Downtime means the Equipment is not functioning in substantial compliance with its specifications, begins (during the Hours of Operation) from the time the Customer speaks to an authorized Pitney Xxxxx Service Representative about the malfunction to the Equipment, and does not include time when the Equipment is inoperable due to: (i) scheduled preventative maintenance and inspections; (ii) damage by misuse, malintent, casualty, or force majeure events; (iii) failure of Customer to perform, or cause to be performed, adequate preventative maintenance and inspections, including, without limitation proper cleaning, handling and servicing of the Equipment; (iv) use of damaged, improper, or non-Imagistics approved materials and supplies in the Equipment; (v) changes in incoming power beyond published specifications; (vi) maintenance or repairs required as a result of the Equipment being used in excess of the Hours of Operation; (vii) maintenance provided by parties other than Pitney Xxxxx; (viii) failure of a non-standard part; (ix) malfunction of equipment or software provided by Customer or third parties which interfaces with the Equipment; (x) the use of the Equipment for training exercises; (xi) failure of Customer to provide suitable temperature, humidity, line voltage, or any specified environmental conditions; and (xii) the Equipment not being used in accordance with the agreed applications and for the ordinary purpose for which it is designed and intended. Service Standards Response Time Zone 1,2 -- Average 4 hours Zone 3 -- Average 5.5 hours Zone 4 -- Average 7 hours Uptime Zone 1,2 -- Average 98% Zone 3 -- Average 96% Zone 4 -- Average 94% PBI / Imagistics Transition Services Agreement Schedule 1K -- Telecom Expenses in Shared Locations General Imagistics will continue to use the PBI telephone systems specified shared locations. This will include local and long distance service for the Imagistics employees in the specified locations.

Related to Equipment Downtime

  • Planned Downtime means planned downtime for upgrades and maintenance to the Services scheduled in advance of such upgrades and maintenance.

  • Downtime means the Total Minutes in the Month during which the Cloud Service (or Servers for Server Provisioning) does not respond to a request from SAP’s Point of Demarcation for the data center providing the Cloud Service (or Server for Server Provisioning), excluding Excluded Downtime.

  • Satellite means any satellite owned by the Issuer or any of its Restricted Subsidiaries and any satellite purchased by the Issuer or any of its Restricted Subsidiaries pursuant to the terms of a Satellite Purchase Agreement, whether such satellite is in the process of manufacture, has been delivered for launch or is in orbit (whether or not in operational service).

  • Electrical equipment means underground equipment that contains dielectric fluid that is necessary for the operation of equipment such as transformers and buried electrical cable.

  • Unscheduled Downtime means any time when any or all of the applications and Services provided by the Supplier to the Customer shall be unavailable to the Customer due to unexpected system failures other than Scheduled Downtime or the downtime is attributable to events not under the control of the Supplier.

  • Airport Ground Support Equipment means vehicles and equipment used at an airport to service aircraft between flights.

  • Scheduled Downtime has the meaning set forth in Section 5.2.

  • Outage has the meaning set forth in the CAISO Tariff.

  • Stand Alone System Upgrade Facilities means System Upgrade Facilities that a Developer may construct without affecting day-to-day operations of the New York State Transmission System during their construction. NYISO, the Connecting Transmission Owner and the Developer must agree as to what constitutes Stand Alone System Upgrade Facilities and identify them in Appendix A to this Agreement.

  • Service Equipment means any equipment, Software, systems, cabling and facilities provided by or on behalf of Verizon and used to facilitate provision of the Services at a Customer Site. Ownership of the Service Equipment does not pass to Customer. Service Equipment does not include Verizon Facilities.

  • Customer Equipment means hardware, software, systems, cabling and facilities provided by you and used in conjunction with the Equipment that we supply to you in order to receive the Services;

  • Maintenance Outage means NERC Event Type MO, as set forth in attached Exhibit B, and includes any outage involving ten percent (10%) of the Facility’s Net Output that is not a Forced Outage or a Planned Outage.

  • Satellite Manufacturer means, with respect to any Satellite, the prime contractor and manufacturer of such Satellite.

  • Launch Vehicle means an object, or any part thereof, intended for launch, launched from Earth, or returning to Earth which carries Payloads or persons, or both.

  • Connectivity means the provision of a Permanent Separated Bicycle Lane system that reflects desired routes between all major origins and destinations in the city.

  • Outages means the planned unavailability of transmission and/or generation facilities dispatched by PJM or the NYISO, as described in Section 35.9 of this Agreement.

  • Electric System Upgrades means any Network Upgrades, Distribution Upgrades, or Interconnection Facilities that are determined to be necessary by the CAISO or Participating Transmission Owner, as applicable, to physically and electrically interconnect the Project to the Participating Transmission Owner’s electric system for receipt of Energy at the Point of Interconnection (as defined in the CAISO Tariff) if connecting to the CAISO Grid, or the Interconnection Point, if connecting to a part of the Participating TO’s electric system that is not part of the CAISO Grid.

  • Interconnection equipment means a group of components or an integrated system owned and operated by the interconnection customer that connects an electric generator with a local electric power system, as that term is defined in Section 3.1.6.2 of IEEE Standard 1547, or with the electric distribution system. Interconnection equipment is all interface equipment including switchgear, protective devices, inverters or other interface devices. Interconnection equipment may be installed as part of an integrated equipment package that includes a generator or other electric source.

  • Customer-generator means a user of a net metering system.

  • Interconnection Point means the point(s) of connection(s) at which the project is connected to the grid i.e. it shall be at 11 / 22 kV bus bar level of substation of MSEDCL.

  • Carrier Access Billing System (“CABS”) is the system which is defined in a document prepared under the direction of the Billing Committee of the OBF. The CABS document is published by Telcordia in Volumes 1, 1A, 2, 3, 3A, 4 and 5 as Special Reports SR-OPT-001868, SR-OPT-0011869, SR-OPT-001871, SR-OPT- 001872, SR-OPT-001873, SR-OPT-001874, and SR-OPT-001875, respectively, and contains the recommended guidelines for the billing of access and other connectivity services. Sprint’s carrier access billing system is its Carrier Access Support System (CASS). CASS mirrors the requirements of CABS.

  • Construction Phase Services means the coordination, implementation and execution of the Work required by this Agreement, which are further defined in Article 8.

  • Interconnection Activation Date means the date that the construction of the joint facility Interconnection arrangement has been completed, trunk groups have been established, joint trunk testing is completed and trunks have been mutually accepted by the Parties.

  • Tourism destination project means a qualified non-gaming

  • Planned Outage means the removal of equipment from service availability for inspection and/or general overhaul of one or more major equipment groups. To qualify as a Planned Outage, the maintenance (a) must actually be conducted during the Planned Outage, and in Seller’s sole discretion must be of the type that is necessary to reliably maintain the Project, (b) cannot be reasonably conducted during Project operations, and (c) causes the generation level of the Project to be reduced by at least ten percent (10%) of the Contract Capacity.

  • INTER-CONNECTION POINT/ DELIVERY/ METERING POINT means a single point at 220kV or above, where the power from the Project(s) is injected into the identified ISTS Substation (including the dedicated transmission line connecting the Projects with the substation system) as specified in the RfS document. Metering shall be done at this interconnection point where the power is injected into. For interconnection with grid and metering, the WPDs shall abide by the relevant CERC/ SERC Regulations, Grid Code and Central Electricity Authority (Installation and Operation of Meters) Regulations, 2006 as amended and revised from time to time.