Here’s how BLOX transforms early signals into planned actions that protect tube performance.

January 09, 2026

Every unplanned maintenance story begins the same way: a system running, a sudden stop, and a rush to respond. When the production line goes down, attention turns to the problem rather than the process. You fix what’s broken, restart the system, and move on, until it happens again. This pattern, called the reactive cycle, keeps companies stuck at the bottom of the performance curve. In the reactive circle, maintenance is driven by events rather than planning. Failures trigger actions, not insight. Engineers spend valuable hours troubleshooting instead of improving systems. And each loop, repair, restart, repeat, feels productive but leads nowhere. The more reactive you become, the less control you have over uptime, cost, and predictability.

The hidden cost of being reactive

Being reactive may feel unavoidable, but it comes at a steep price. Every unplanned shutdown means lost hours, lost revenue, and lost focus. Costs escalate as emergency parts are ordered, service engineers are dispatched, and production stops unexpectedly. But the more profound impact is cultural – a mindset that normalizes firefighting and accepts downtime as a given.

Reactive behavior blinds you to the warning signs your systems already provide. Slight temperature increases, irregular shutdowns, or abnormal cycle counts often appear months or weeks before a failure. Without structured monitoring, these signs go unnoticed. By the time action is taken, damage has already occurred. That is the real pain of being reactive: you learn only after it's too late.

Figure 1: Reactive cycle diagram. 

At 12 o'clock – the preventive mindset

At Comet X-ray, we describe the ideal maintenance state as 12 o'clock – the top of the circle where foresight replaces reaction. It's the point where insight becomes control. At 12 o'clock, your systems don't wait for problems; they tell you what's coming. You plan service based on data, not disruption.

BLOX was designed to help OEMs and system owners maintain their competitive edge. It's an IIoT health monitor that delivers smart insights into X-ray tubes and generators —the critical core of every imaging system. BLOX collects performance data, identifies trends, and highlights where action is needed – turning uncertainty into foresight and downtime into planning. 

Figure 2: 12 o'clock - the ideal state 

From guesswork to clarity

"With BLOX, we move from guesswork to clarity," says Corbat, product manager for BLOX."It helps identify and manage risks in a structured way, make faster decisions, and significantly reduce the time spent troubleshooting." Unlike full-system monitoring tools, BLOX focuses precisely on what matters: tubes and generators. After Comet delivers the iXRS module, the OEM integrates it into the system that the end-user operates daily.

The OEM should ideally upload diagnostic data from the system to BLOX at regular intervals, every 1 to 2 months, gaining visibility into the system's actual performance. The insights drive preventive maintenance recommendations and structured service planning.

Roles and benefits across the chain

Actor

Role

Benefit

Comet Provides BLOX data from X-ray modules Reliable performance insight and transparency
OEM Monitors and analyzes data remotely Enables preventive service planning
End-user Operates the system Fewer surprises, longer uptime, higher trust

 

Data becomes power

The difference between reactive and preventive maintenance isn’t just speed; it’s knowledge. BLOX turns data into actionable intelligence. It identifies early trends such as irregular shutdowns, arcs, or temperature deviations and translates them into recommendations like adjusting warm-up routines, reducing daily cycles, or scheduling service before failures occur.

By acting on these insights, OEMs are empowered to plan maintenance in advance, shorten service visits, and reduce the mean time to repair (MTTR). End users benefit from smoother operation and more predictable uptime. The result is a shift from guesswork to governance – a process built on understanding instead of urgency.

The measurable impact of BLOX

KPI

Reactive

Preventive with BLOX

Maintenance Unplanned, emergency-based Scheduled, insight-based
Downtime Long and unpredictable Short and planned
Service cost High and variable Lower through preparation
Decision speed Slow and uncertain Fast and data-backed
Customer experience Reactive support Proactive partnership, trust

Best practice scenarios that define the shift from reactive to preventive maintenance.

The scenarios below show BLOX’s modularity. Even when used reactively, it dramatically reduces troubleshooting time. But its real value emerges when it becomes routine – a regular, scheduled practice that enables proper preventive maintenance.

 

BLOX in practice

BLOX supports multiple scenarios – each showing how preventive thinking creates measurable value.

Scenario

Actor(s)

Benefit OEM

Benefit end-user

Preventive, regular reports every 1-2 months OEM & end-user. Remote Act before failures, plan maintenance Avoid unplanned downtime, receive health insights
Before a planned service visit OEM & end-user. Remote Know what to expect and prepare parts Faster service, minimal disruption
Reactive troubleshooting OEM & end-user. Remote Diagnose the issue quickly, decide visit is needed Quicker resolution, reduced downtime
At service start OEM. On-site Document module status before maintenance Transparent service process
After service OEM. On-site Validate performance and report improvements Confirmed system stability

 

Time saved, money earned

Preventive maintenance is one of those rare strategies that saves both time and money. With BLOX, OEMs experience shorter service interventions, optimized planning, and fewer last-minute emergencies. End-users benefit from improved throughput and higher productivity.

Time saved translates directly into money earned. Preventive maintenance reduces spare part waste, improves logistics, and strengthens relationships. The service visit becomes a proactive collaboration, not a crisis response. Each saved hour compounds into better utilization, stronger reputation, and happier customers.

Pascal Corbat at his desk in Flamatt, logging in to BLOX

Latest Posts

From the field. Interview with Pierre-Emmanuel Rigot, Technical & Customer Service at X-RIS

May 19, 2026

Repeated X-ray tube failures were disrupting production and triggering frequent warranty replacements. Although the immediate symptom was filament failure, the underlying cause remained unclear. This case shows how operating data turned assumptions into evidence and made the root cause visible – enabling a constructive, engineering-led solution rather than repeated replacements. As Pierre-Emmanuel Rigot, After-Sales Manager and Technical Field Engineer at X-RIS, explains, the situation had become frustrating for everyone involved: “It was very frustrating for both sides.”

Read more

Film. HP 15 series

May 18, 2026

Precision Imaging and minimal downtime – the High Power 15 Series. Find out how the Xtra Performance series' dual square focal spots, independent filaments, a larger beam and field of view, and a 15-degree target angle will give you a competitive edge.

Read more

Interview with Patrick Carlson, Service Manager and Level III at North Star Imaging

May 11, 2026

The success of an inspection system is rarely decided at installation. It is decided months later, in daily use. Patrick Carlson has spent decades working inside aerospace manufacturing and inspection environments, supporting customers through change, training, and production pressure.  As Service Manager and Level III at North Star Imaging, he works where systems meet reality - helping customers balance capability, ease of use, and the human side of inspection. His perspective shows why long-term performance depends as much on people and workflows as it does on technology.

Read more