Work Packs
About Work Packs
A Work Pack is a collection of records that define inspection work that needs to be performed for a piece of equipment or functional location. Work Packs store preparatory information about necessary inspections. Work Packs, in combination with Inspections and Inspection Tasks that can be linked to Work Packs, are intended to define planned inspection work that can be estimated by the outside resources who perform the work.
About the Work Pack Hierarchy
You can create a Work Pack Hierarchy to organize the work that you will perform during inspections, where:
- The lowest level of the hierarchy contains a Work Pack for the actual item that will be inspected (i.e., a piece of equipment or location).
- The levels above the lowest level contain Work Pack for the locations containing the item that will be inspected.
Each Work Pack hierarchy can include up to three levels.
To fully understand this concept, you must understand the concept of a location hierarchy, where each location at a lower level belongs to a location at a higher level.
Work Pack Hierarchy
You might have a location hierarchy that looks like the following diagram, where process locations belong to systems, systems belong to units, and so on.
Regardless of how many levels you create in a Work Pack hierarchy, you should link Inspection Tasks and Inspections directly to the Work Pack that represents the asset that will be inspected. In other words, in the first example, you would link Inspection Tasks and Inspections directly to the equipment-level Work Packs (not the location-level Work Packs). In the second example, you would link Inspection Tasks and Inspections directly to the process-location-level Work Packs (not the system-level or unit-level Work Packs).
Example: Work Packs - Equipment
If you are inspecting equipment, the lowest level of the hierarchy should contain Work Packs representing the equipment. If you want to include three levels in the Work Pack hierarchy, the top two levels should represent the locations to which the equipment belong. For example, if your location hierarchy looks like the previous example, you would want to structure the Work Pack hierarchy as seen in the following diagram:
Example: Work Packs - Location
In your inspection locations, the lowest level of the hierarchy should contain Work Packs representing those locations. If you want to include three levels in the Work Pack hierarchy, the top two levels should represent the higher-level locations to which those locations belong. For example, if your location hierarchy looks like the diagram in the Work Pack Hierarchy section, you would want to structure the Work Pack hierarchy as seen in the following diagram:
Access the Work Packs Section
Procedure
Results
- You can now select a Work Pack ID or a Sub Work Pack ID, and then edit the selection.
Create a Work Pack
Procedure
Link a Work Pack
About This Task
Procedure
Unlink a Work Pack
Procedure
Delete a Work Pack
Procedure
Results
- Inspection Tasks and Inspection records that were linked to the deleted Work Pack are unlinked, although the records remain in the database.
Create Single and Bulk Inspections
About This Task
Procedure
- Create a Single Inspection for a Work Pack
- Create a Bulk Inspection for a Work Pack