GEA launches InsightPartner EvoHDry
08/12/2025
GEA has launched InsightPartner EvoHDry, which is engineered for complex industrial environments, where uninterrupted operation is essential for producing items such as infant formula, cream, evaporated milk, condensed milk and cheese.
The system applies real-time condition monitoring, a maintenance approach based on the continuous collection and analysis of machine data to detect early warning signs of equipment degradation. Parameters such as temperature, pressure, vibration and flow are tracked in real time, providing operators with a clear view of system performance. The solution offers an app- and web-based component status to receive real-time information on machine health.
In the dairy sector, one of the most frequent causes of unplanned downtime is a gradual loss of suction pressure in the vacuum pumps within evaporation systems. This condition reduces evaporator efficiency, causing output to fall below target performance thresholds and potentially forcing an unplanned shutdown. Failures of this type are commonly linked to dry running, wear in pump components or lubrication loss when product contamination occurs. GEA InsightPartner EvoHDry employs predictive analytics to recognise these patterns early and generate pre-alarm notifications that prompt an intervention before a critical failure takes place.
Beyond specific equipment failures, many dairy and liquid plants face broader operational challenges. Modern process plants rely heavily on supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems to monitor operations, but the number of alarms generated can overwhelm operators, making it difficult to filter and prioritise issues. At the same time, shortages of skilled technicians mean fewer personnel are available to interpret alarms or carry out diagnostics. Traditional manual checks consume time and resources, while the absence of an integrated view of machine health often forces teams into reactive, emergency-driven maintenance. GEA InsightPartner EvoHDry addresses these problems by combining expert maintenance guidance with data-driven decision-making. Through real-time insights and predictive trends, operators can focus on the most critical issues, optimise maintenance schedules and keep production on track.
The technical set-up of the system is designed for accuracy and security. It includes sensors for vibration, flow and pressure, as well as links, cables and an edge gateway, a local computing device that collects and preprocesses data before sending it to the cloud. By processing data locally, the gateway ensures rapid response times and reduces dependence on external networks. The system operates independently of the customer’s IT infrastructure, so no direct access to plant networks is required, minimising cybersecurity risks.
Once preprocessed, data is transferred securely to the GEA Cloud and GEA Portal, where GEA’s proprietary modelling algorithms evaluate equipment condition. Certified vibration specialists validate diagnostics, adding human expertise to automated analysis.
“Unplanned downtime remains the biggest challenge for dairy processors,” said Angela Yeung, Digital Portfolio and Strategy Lead for Liquid and Power Technologies at GEA. “By using predictive insights, customers can intervene before failures occur, reducing costs and improving efficiency. With GEA InsightPartner EvoHDry, operators gain clear insight into machine health. Instead of reacting to unexpected shutdowns, they can plan maintenance based on reliable diagnostics, keeping production stable and output consistent.”
GEA InsightPartner EvoHDry has been tailored for evaporators, spray dryers, pumps and rotating equipment, with monitoring extending from the vacuum stage through to clean-in-place cycles, providing full coverage of peripheral systems.