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SEW-EURODRIVE|South Africa|Mining|Predictive Maintenance|Jonathan McKey|Artificial Intelligence|DriveRadar
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sew-eurodrive|south-africa|mining|predictive-maintenance|jonathan-mckey|artificial-intelligence|driveradar

DriverAR and AI provide smarter maintenance in tough mining conditions

Jonathan McKey, Sales and Marketing Manager at SEW-EURODRIVE South Africa.

DriveRadar® IoT Suite enables real-time monitoring and analysis of drive system performance from any locale.

AI overview simulation of the mechanical function of a conveyor gearbox.

The DriveRadar® Diagnostic Unit provides continuous condition monitoring and advanced diagnostics for drive systems.

DriveRadar® integrated with an X.e gearbox provides intelligent condition monitoring and real-time performance insights.

AI-powered simulation tools can model gearbox operating conditions such as oil level distribution.

Monitoring icons on the DriveRadar® platform provide a clear visual overview of equipment health, operating status and performance trends, enabling users to quickly identify conditions that may require attention and make informed maintenance decisions.

2nd June 2026

     

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In African mining, where high costs, harsh environments and tight margins are prevalent, maintenance can make or break profitability. SEW‑EURODRIVE’s DriveRadar® is at the heart of a shift from reactive repairs to intelligent predictive maintenance. As the sector continues to embrace artificial intelligence (AI), Jonathan McKey, Sales and Marketing Manager at SEW-EURODRIVE South Africa, explains that DriveRadar® already incorporates elements of AI to help mines make better decisions faster.

SEW‑EURODRIVE began its digital journey with relatively basic condition monitoring tools but has steadily expanded both the scope and intelligence of its systems. “We started introducing various forms of instrumentation and condition monitoring systems in South Africa in 2008. Since then, we have evolved our technology to encompass more drive information in a singular diagnostic system. This has resulted in the introduction of DriveRadar®.,” he explains.

DriveRadar® continuously monitors a broad set of parameters around each drive. Crucially, DriveRadar® doesn’t stop at raw data.

“The diagnostic unit can monitor various external conditions, harmonics, vibrations, temperatures and based on that it can take the logic and give feedback back to the client, giving them a state of their drive. It also gives it a projected outcome if preventative measures are not put in place. In other words,  DriveRadar is not just measuring; it is interpreting and predicting,” McKey explains.

The practical value of this AI‑style approach is in predictive maintenance. Instead of rigid service schedules or last‑minute fixes, DriveRadar® helps mines act at precisely the right time. “It monitors these changes and these variations, and the impact that would have on the oil and the viscosity and reliability, and it actually intervenes and tells a customer how much longer they can operate a drive safely before it results in premature wear or damage. For mining operations where every hour of lost production translates into significant revenue, that foresight is invaluable,” McKey adds.

By identifying problems early and accurately estimating safe remaining life, DriveRadar® helps mines avoid emergency breakdowns, reduce costly rush orders and plan maintenance around production, not the other way around.

A frontrunner in AI

It has already been proven that AI can have a positive impact on mining. While the technology is still novel in the sector, McKey states that DriveRadar® already represents a practical, embedded form of AI.

“If you consider the fact that the diagnostic unit can monitor all these various external conditions and based on that, it can take the logic and actually create a safe running philosophy. That version of artificial intelligence already basically exists to a degree within the technology.”

Looking ahead, he expects this intelligence to deepen, reducing the analytical burden on the human workforce. “We are constantly evolving our technology and as we progress into the years, we will further enhance this technology and allow less human intervention and more drive technology intervention to assist people in managing plants and production activities.”

For African mines, that trajectory points to a future where smart drives and AI‑style diagnostics work hand in hand with skilled technicians, delivering higher reliability, lower maintenance costs and a much clearer picture of what is happening inside every critical gearbox and motor long before anything fails.

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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