Plans to subscribe

Emergency service subscription
An emergency floor machines repair subscription gives contractors and facility owners a safety net when something breaks at the worst possible time - during a big sanding job, overnight cleaning, or a tight project deadline. Instead of scrambling to find a technician, subscribers get pre-agreed response times, priority scheduling, and a clear process for requesting urgent help. The plan can include a 24/7/365 hotline, guaranteed same-day or next-day on-site visits within a defined service area, workshop repair or substitute of broken machine to our equivalent one, and discounted labor rates for emergency calls. Because we already knows the customer’s machines, sites, and contacts, we can diagnose faster and arrive with the right common parts on the truck.
A good emergency subscription goes beyond “we’ll show up quickly” and builds in prevention. It often bundles priority emergency response with regular preventive maintenance visits, basic operator training, and an agreed stock of critical spare parts (belts, cords, wheels, switches, filters, seals) reserved for that customer. Reports from each emergency call feed into a service history, helping identify machines that should be rebuilt or replaced before they fail again. For the customer, the value is predictable costs, reduced downtime, and peace of mind.

Preventive maintenance plan
A preventive maintenance plan for floor machines is all about fixing problems before they become failures. Instead of waiting for a motor to burn out or a cord to short during a job, the plan breaks care into regular intervals: daily/weekly checks by operators and monthly/quarterly inspections by a technician. Daily tasks might include cleaning the machine, inspecting pads/brushes, checking cords and plugs, emptying recovery tanks, rinsing filters, and looking for leaks or unusual noises. Weekly and monthly tasks go deeper: checking belt tension, inspecting bearings and wheels, tightening fasteners, cleaning dust compartments and fans, checking vacuum performance, and testing all switches and safety devices.
A good plan is machine-specific and written down, not just “we’ll look at it when we remember.” Each model - sander, edger, buffer, scrubber, extractor, vacuum - gets its own checklist with what to inspect, how often, and what “normal” looks and sounds like. We (or your trained in-house maintenance team) schedules routine shop visits to do deeper work such as motor inspections, carbon brush checks, hose and seal replacements, drum or pad driver alignment, and electrical tests. All findings and actions are logged with dates, hours, and parts used, building a service history. Over time, this history helps predict when components typically fail, so they can be replaced proactively. The result: fewer breakdowns, longer machine life, more reliable performance on the job, and lower total repair costs.

Predictive maintenance plan
A predictive maintenance plan for floor machines uses data and condition monitoring to decide when to service a machine - rather than relying only on fixed time intervals or waiting for breakdowns. Instead of “inspect every 3 months,” the plan looks at run hours, load, temperature, vibration, motor current, and even dust or moisture exposure to spot early warning signs. This can be done with simple tools we provide (hour meters, checklists noting noise/heat/vibration changes, logbooks for recurring issues) or with IoT sensors that automatically collect and send data. When the data crosses certain thresholds - like rising motor temperature, increased vibration, or falling vacuum performance - the machine is scheduled for service before a failure occurs.
For floor machines fleets, predictive maintenance becomes especially powerful. We can track patterns across many sanders, buffers, scrubbers, extractors, and vacuums: how long belts typically last, when bearings start to get noisy, how often cords fail under certain usage, or when carbon brushes usually need replacement. Software dashboards or simple spreadsheets can flag “at-risk” machines based on hours and condition trends, automatically creating work orders. Combined with good reporting and spare-parts planning, predictive maintenance reduces surprise breakdowns during critical jobs, makes better use of technician time, and extends the life of expensive machines - while giving contractors and facility managers a clear, data-backed story about when and why each repair is done.
