NFI.Parts

NFI.Parts Keeping transit reliable is what drives us.

NFI Parts supports the coach and bus industries with OEM and remanufactured components, backed by global supply chain insight to keep your fleet moving efficiently.

Understanding technician coverage is key to planning maintenance work.For bus and motorcoach fleets, training is often t...
05/28/2026

Understanding technician coverage is key to planning maintenance work.

For bus and motorcoach fleets, training is often tracked by tenure or general experience. While useful, that approach doesn’t always reflect current familiarity with specific systems.

As vehicles become more complex—multiplex wiring, HVAC, ADA systems—visibility into system-level proficiency becomes more important for scheduling and coverage.

A structured view can help teams better understand where support may be needed:

👉 Align training records to major systems (brakes, electrical, HVAC, doors, accessibility equipment)
👉 Track completion of relevant training or maintenance activities
👉 Review coverage across shifts and locations to identify gaps

This type of visibility can support planning during peak demand, vacations, or service changes.

The goal isn’t to replace existing processes—it’s to make technician coverage easier to understand and manage.

How does your team track system-level proficiency across your fleet?

Procurement Errors usually start with Weak Parts Data.You usually discover a parts-identification problem too late—after...
05/26/2026

Procurement Errors usually start with Weak Parts Data.

You usually discover a parts-identification problem too late—after the wrong item was ordered, received, staged, or installed. The fix isn't faster purchasing; it is better data governance.

For bus and motorcoach fleets, true operational control doesn't mean reactive firefighting; it means proactive accuracy. An efficient procurement program isn't a scramble to complete work orders; it is a repeatable system that maintenance, procurement, and receiving govern together.

Before placing the order, you must match the vehicle to the correct component using verified signals:

👉 Approved Part Number: The specific maintenance signal.
👉 BOM Reference & Index: The procurement connection to engineering standards (aligned with APTA guidelines).
👉 Configuration Applicability: Ensuring the part matches the vehicle’s specific build parameters (e.g., Unit 202-210, not just "Unit 202").
👉 Revision Control: Tracking engineering changes to avoid buying obsolete parts.

Discover how to implement a proactive Parts-Master Record and turn weak data into efficient outcomes.

👉 https://bit.ly/4t4kXKV

Wheel-end performance depends on consistency.For bus and motorcoach fleets, torque specifications, surface preparation, ...
05/21/2026

Wheel-end performance depends on consistency.

For bus and motorcoach fleets, torque specifications, surface preparation, lubrication, and re-torque intervals all play a role. The challenge is not defining these requirements—it’s ensuring they are applied the same way across shifts and facilities.

When processes vary, outcomes can vary as well.

A consistent approach often includes:

👉 Clear procedures available at the point of work
👉 Training aligned with manufacturer guidance
👉 Verification of tools and setup before work begins
👉 Defined intervals for follow-up checks such as re-torque

These steps help support more consistent ex*****on across teams and locations.

The goal isn’t to introduce new requirements—it’s to ensure existing standards are applied the same way every time.

Most breakdowns are predictable."It was running fine yesterday." That’s not a maintenance strategy. It’s a lagging indic...
05/19/2026

Most breakdowns are predictable.

"It was running fine yesterday." That’s not a maintenance strategy. It’s a lagging indicator.

For bus and motorcoach fleets, failures rarely come from a single catastrophic event. They happen when components—filters, belts, brakes, or electrical systems—are allowed to drift outside their required service intervals. When demand increases, those gaps are immediately exposed on the road.

The root cause isn't a lack of maintenance; it’s a lack of structure. Relying on loosely followed schedules or technician discretion guarantees inconsistency. And inconsistency leads directly to downtime.

Preventative maintenance is not a checklist. It’s a control system. High-performing fleets don't wait for a breakdown; they monitor these four early-warning signals:

👉 Missed PMs: Units operating beyond scheduled, fixed intervals.
👉 Repeat Failures: Components failing more than once within a cycle.
👉 Unplanned Repairs: Spikes in work orders created outside of scheduled maintenance.
👉 Parts Delays: Downtime caused by unavailable components and poor forecasting.

Fleets that rely on reactive maintenance will always chase failures. Fleets that define their cadence, enforce replacement thresholds, and act on early signals stay in control.

👉 https://bit.ly/41Nxib1Discover how to move from reactive repairs to operational control by aligning Planning, Ex*****on, and Verification.

How does your fleet measure PM compliance before it turns into a road call?

Wishing our Canadian customers, partners, and team members a safe and enjoyable Victoria Day.As the long weekend marks t...
05/15/2026

Wishing our Canadian customers, partners, and team members a safe and enjoyable Victoria Day.

As the long weekend marks the unofficial start of warmer-weather travel across Canada, we recognize the bus and coach pros who help keep communities, passengers, and fleets moving.

From all of us at NFI Parts, enjoy the long weekend.

Managers don’t need to handle diagnostics—but they do need visibility into what’s happening before faults are cleared.On...
05/14/2026

Managers don’t need to handle diagnostics—but they do need visibility into what’s happening before faults are cleared.

On J1939-equipped buses and motorcoaches, clearing a fault code without capturing context can make it harder to understand recurring conditions later on.

When the same issue appears again, teams may not have enough information to compare events or identify patterns.

A consistent approach can help improve visibility across units and shifts. Before clearing codes, some fleets focus on capturing:

👉 Fault and lamp status at the time of the event
👉 Operating conditions (RPM, load, temperature)
👉 Basic connector and network checks
👉 Any recent related maintenance activity

This type of information helps provide context over time and supports more informed troubleshooting.

Does your team have a consistent approach to capturing diagnostic information?

By May, most fleets are already preparing for increased demand on climate control systems.For bus and motorcoach operati...
05/12/2026

By May, most fleets are already preparing for increased demand on climate control systems.

For bus and motorcoach operations, HVAC performance becomes more critical as temperatures rise. The challenge is not identifying what needs attention—it’s ensuring preparation happens early enough to support consistent service.

A structured approach typically includes:

Defined inspection timing ahead of peak conditions
Clear technician coverage and system familiarity
Verified handling requirements for refrigerant systems

Before warmer conditions arrive, it can be helpful to review:

👉 Which vehicles have recurring climate-control concerns
👉 Whether technicians have the appropriate certifications
👉 What inspections are scheduled and still pending

Having visibility into these areas supports more consistent planning as demand increases.

Read more: https://bit.ly/41IiVEV

Brake inspection is often treated as a shop activity. In practice, it’s a management responsibility.For bus and motorcoa...
05/07/2026

Brake inspection is often treated as a shop activity. In practice, it’s a management responsibility.

For bus and motorcoach fleets, consistency comes from alignment—who performs the inspection, what standard is used, and how results are recorded.

When these elements are not clearly defined, outcomes can vary between shifts, locations, or inspectors.

A structured approach typically includes:

👉 Qualified inspectors with documented training or experience
👉 A defined periodic inspection standard applied consistently
👉 Clear pass/fail documentation for each inspection
👉 Management visibility into completed inspections and results

This type of alignment helps ensure inspections are performed the same way across the operation.

For reference, many fleets look to established guidance such as FMCSA 49 CFR Part 396 and Appendix A for inspector qualifications and periodic inspection standards.

Asset management frameworks provide structure—but ex*****on determines value.For bus and motorcoach fleets, the challeng...
05/05/2026

Asset management frameworks provide structure—but ex*****on determines value.

For bus and motorcoach fleets, the challenge isn’t defining what to track. It’s turning that information into something leadership can review consistently and act on.

Many organizations already collect the data. What’s often missing is a simple, repeatable way to look at it.

A practical approach is to focus on a small number of signals that reflect overall fleet condition:

🔹 Rolling Stock: Vehicles approaching or beyond expected service life
🔹 Support Equipment: Service vehicles and tools supporting operations
🔹 Facilities: Condition of maintenance and operational locations
🔹 Shop Systems: Equipment used to support maintenance activities
🔹 Availability: Portion of the fleet ready for daily service

When these are reviewed consistently, patterns become easier to spot and conversations become more focused.

The goal isn’t more reporting—it’s clearer visibility.

Read more: https://bit.ly/4vHT3Xk

In the tour and charter business, a 15-minute delay is never just 15 minutes. It’s a domino.When you're managing a tight...
04/30/2026

In the tour and charter business, a 15-minute delay is never just 15 minutes. It’s a domino.

When you're managing a tight itinerary, a minor operational gap doesn't stay small for long. It travels down the line, gaining momentum until it hits the person who matters most: your customer.

The "Domino Effect" of a Small Issue:
🔹 The Spark: A late departure or a minor mechanical hiccup.

🔹 The Friction: A late pickup that puts you behind the schedule.

🔹 The Compression: A shortened route that forces drivers to rush and increases vehicle strain.

🔹 The Impact: A compromised passenger experience and a hit to your brand's reputation.

The most successful fleet operators don’t just focus on the moment things go wrong. They focus on predictability. They know that an avoidable delay—like a part that wasn’t replaced during a scheduled PM or a component that took too long to source—is the most expensive kind of delay there is.

Reliability isn't just about keeping buses moving; it's about keeping the schedule intact.

How does your team identify these "small" signals before they hit the customer?

Matters

Stop chasing speed. Start building consistency. ⏱️True productivity isn't about how fast you can react to a crisis—it's ...
04/28/2026

Stop chasing speed. Start building consistency. ⏱️

True productivity isn't about how fast you can react to a crisis—it's about removing the disruption before it starts.

The most successful fleets don't just fix problems; they prevent them. This proactive approach is what builds a reliable foundation for on-time operations.

Ready to shift your focus from speed to stability?

👉 https://bit.ly/47UWD6f Read our latest blog to learn what actually keeps your fleet operations running on time.

Address

7001 Bus Universal Coach Drive
Louisville, KY
40258

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 8pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm

Telephone

+18003231290

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when NFI.Parts posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to NFI.Parts:

Share