Rubix will showcase wind energy maintenance, repair, and overhaul capability at All-Energy 2026, with a focus on engineered retrofit solutions for ageing turbine assets.
The industrial distributor will exhibit on stand D28 at the SEC Glasgow event, which takes place on 13–14 May 2026. Its display will include core MRO products, reverse engineered components, and a prototype gearbox, alongside technical support for diagnosing turbine failures and extending component life.
Wind operators are under growing pressure to increase uptime while controlling the cost of maintaining mature assets. Gearboxes, generators, motors, yaw systems, and other rotating equipment can present long lead-time problems when replacement parts are tied to original equipment manufacturer supply routes.
Rubix’s wind offer combines industrial distribution, supply chain resilience, and in-house engineering capability. The company works with operators to identify the root cause of component failure, map replacement parts, and develop equivalent or upgraded solutions where standard replacement routes are slow, costly, or no longer available.
Peter Mitchell, Renewables Director at Rubix, said: “Wind is critical to unlocking the potential of renewable energy in the UK, which is why we’re focussed on supporting operators to get the most out of their existing assets. We do that by solving challenges through engineering-led solutions, diagnosing the true cause of failures and delivering upgrades that improve performance and extend asset life.
“We’re looking forward to demonstrating our approach during All Energy and showcasing how we’re already supporting operators to keep critical machinery running smoothly. Part of that approach is the partnerships we’re carving out across the sector to strengthen solutions and enhance reliability, and we’ll be demonstrating the value of this complete approach during the exhibition.”
Ageing wind fleets are placing more emphasis on component refurbishment, reverse engineering, and targeted upgrades. These routes can reduce dependence on long replacement cycles, provided inspection, materials selection, traceability, and testing are controlled to a standard suitable for safety-critical rotating machinery.
Rubix says its approach is built around diagnosing failure modes before specifying repairs or replacements. That gives operators a route to address recurring faults rather than repeatedly replacing the same component, while maintaining access to quality MRO products through a wider industrial supply chain.
The company will also use All-Energy to discuss partnerships across the renewables sector, including work intended to strengthen turbine reliability and improve the availability of critical components.
Visitors can meet the Rubix technical team on stand D28 at All-Energy 2026.



