A preventive maintenance schedule that actually works

Every fleet says it does preventive maintenance. The difference between the ones that mean it and the ones that hope for the best shows up in one number: unplanned downtime. Here is a practical framework used in some form by well-run fleets everywhere.

The foundation: daily walk-around

Five minutes, every departure. Lights, tyres, air build-up time, visible leaks, coupling, load security. The driver is the cheapest sensor the fleet owns — and the only one that can smell a dragging brake. Walk-around findings must flow into the maintenance system, or the habit dies.

The A-B-C service structure

  • A service (light, frequent): lubrication, oil and fluid level checks, filter inspections, brake stroke checks, tyre condition and pressures, cab systems. Think of it as a structured health check.
  • B service (intermediate): everything in A, plus engine oil and filter change, fuel filters, air dryer cartridge, valve clearance where scheduled, driveline inspection, ABS/EBS fault readout. Vaden’s air dryer service guide is a solid reference for cartridge intervals.
  • C service (heavy, annual): everything in B, plus wheel-off brake inspection, wheel bearing checks, cooling system service, aircon service, chassis torque checks and a full diagnostic scan.

Set intervals by data, not folklore

Start from the manufacturer’s schedule for your duty cycle — long-haul, regional and construction work age components very differently. Then refine with your own data: oil analysis results, brake wear rates and fault trends will tell you where the factory interval is too generous or too cautious for your operation.

Make it stick

  • Schedule services by kilometres or engine hours, whichever arrives first.
  • Use telematics odometer feeds to trigger work orders automatically — calendar-based guessing leaks money.
  • Track first-time-fix rate and repeat defects; both expose weak workshops and weak parts.
  • Never let a vehicle leave a service with an open safety defect. “We will catch it next time” is how roadside out-of-service reports get written.

Intervals and scope vary by manufacturer, market and duty cycle. Use OEM documentation as the baseline and your own fleet data as the correction.

Cover photo: MatthiasK 1412 via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0

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