For many manufacturing leaders, maintenance costs have become an unavoidable drain on profitability. Unexpected equipment failures, emergency repairs, production delays, and rising labor expenses can quickly erode margins. According to the 2025 State of Industrial Maintenance Report, downtime costs now exceed $25,000 per hour for the average industrial facility, and nearly one-third of manufacturers reported that downtime costs increased over the previous year.
Alejandro Casso
Recent Posts
How Rugged Rotary Encoders Reduce Maintenance Costs
From Accuracy to Uptime: How Industrial Encoder Suppliers Impact Production KPIs
When production targets tighten and margins shrink, even the smallest component choices start to matter. Industrial encoders are a perfect example. They may seem like low-profile parts, but the supplier you choose can have a measurable impact on your most critical production KPIs - from uptime to yield.
SIL Encoders for Winder Safety: 10 Questions Answered
Encoder vs Tachometer: Impact on Precision, Control, and Throughput
Encoder vs Resolver: Choosing the Best for Industrial Automation
It’s 2:00 a.m. at an automotive plant in the Midwest. A servo-driven assembly line has just gone down. Production stops. Every idle minute costs thousands of dollars. The maintenance team identifies the issue to be a failed position feedback device mounted near a high-heat welding cell.
How to Choose the Right Position Encoder for Harsh Industrial Environments
Smart Pulse Encoders: Why They’re Powering the Next Wave of Industrial Automation
How Single-Turn Encoders are a Game-Changer in Industrial Automation?
With the increasing dominance of industrial automation, precision has become a must-have. Whether it’s material handling systems, assembly lines, or packaging machinery, manufacturers rely on correct position feedback for everything to keep running efficiently. And that’s where a tiny device enters the stage - a quiet powerhouse in the world of modern automation - the single-turn encoder.
How Will Encoder Technology Trends 2025-26 Transform Cranes & Hoists?
High-Resolution Encoders in Heavy Industry
In modern industrial automation, precision isn’t an option, it’s essential. Whether you're operating a crane in a steel mill, managing high-speed rollers in a paper plant, or synchronizing conveyors in a manufacturing facility, the demand for tighter tolerances and smarter control systems continues to grow. Encoders are found at the heart of these systems. Encoders are devices that convert mechanical motion into digital signals for real-time feedback and control.
