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How MIS Works

A small sensor, a growing record, and clear answers about your machines.

1

Install

We attach a compact MIS sensor to your machine. It needs stable contact with the equipment to pick up meaningful signals. During the pilot, our team handles everything: mounting, quality verification, and linking a QR code to your machine's live status page.

2

Listen and learn

MIS records vibration and acoustic patterns around the clock. The longer it listens, the better it understands what normal looks like for your specific machine. This is not a snapshot. It is continuous observation that gets sharper every day.

3

Spot real changes

When your machine starts behaving differently, MIS catches it. Drift, looseness, unusual vibration patterns. You get a clear signal about whether the change is worth looking into or safe to ignore.

4

Verify what you did

After a repair or inspection, MIS compares the machine before and after. It does not assume the fix worked. It checks whether the numbers actually changed. This closes the loop on every maintenance action you take.

5

Know when to act and when to wait

Over time, MIS builds enough history to tell you which changes matter and which ones do not. It highlights persistent problems and, just as importantly, confirms when your machine is running fine. If the data is not strong enough to make a call, MIS tells you that too.

Safety Note

For safety critical equipment, stop operation and consult a qualified technician. MIS provides evidence and guidance, but operators and maintenance professionals are always responsible for safe operation decisions.

Ready to see it in action?

Start a free pilot and find out what MIS can tell you about your machines.

Start a Free PilotInstructions