Explore tiles: All Equipment, Aging, Calibration, Rentals, Benchmarks
Open **Equipment** from the sidebar at `iq.verinode.ai/equipment`. Below the hero panel and the **Take Action** row sits **Explore**, a horizontal row of five tiles: **All Equipment**, **Aging Unit…
On this page
What the Explore row shows
Open Equipment from the sidebar at iq.verinode.ai/equipment. Below the hero panel and the Take Action row sits Explore, a horizontal row of five tiles: All Equipment, Aging Units, Calibration OK, Rentals, and Benchmarks. Each tile is a fast read on one dimension of your fleet: how big it is, how old it is, whether your instruments are within their calibration cycle, how much you're carrying on rental, and how you compare to your peers. Every tile is also a door: tap it and Verinode drops you straight into the matching part of the equipment detail slider, scrolled to the exact subsection that tile is about.
Verinode does not decide what to do with any of this. The tiles surface what the fleet data says; you decide whether a unit gets serviced, retired, or kept running.
Note
Every number on these tiles is computed from equipment you have logged, active units only (retired units are excluded from every calculation on this row). As CSVs, photos, and invoices flow in, the tiles fill in on their own, no manual entry required.
All Equipment
What it is. A count of your active fleet, with a histogram of how it's spread across equipment classes.
What you see. The headline number is your total active unit count (this sums each row's logged quantity, so five identical dehumidifiers on one line count as five). The line underneath reads, for example, "42 units · 6 classes", the number of distinct equipment rows and the number of distinct classes they span. The preview underneath is a distribution chart, a sorted histogram bar for each of your top classes by quantity (up to eight), tallest first, so you can see at a glance whether your fleet is concentrated in a few classes or spread wide.
No peer delta. This tile is a size read on your own inventory, not a comparison.
Tap it. Opens the All Equipment tab of the equipment detail slider, the full list of every unit you have on file.
Empty state. With no equipment logged, the count reads "0" and the distribution chart shows a single dotted baseline instead of bars, Verinode's way of showing "nothing to plot yet" rather than a broken chart.
Aging Units
What it is. The share of your active fleet that has crossed 80% of its expected lifespan. This is a leading indicator, not a breakdown, a unit in this bucket isn't broken, but the reliability risk on it is compounding.
What you see. The headline is a percentage, "past 80% of expected life" underneath. The preview is a gauge, a half-circle dial with three colored zones, an ember-red zone up to 25%, an amber zone from 25% to 50%, and a green zone above that. This gauge is inverted from a typical "more is better" reading: a low aging share is good. The needle points at your value, and the dial itself is toned green when you're at or under a quarter of your fleet aging, amber up to half, and red past that.
Peer delta. When Verinode has a peer or industry reference for fleet aging, a delta line appears under the tile, formatted as a signed percentage-point difference, for example "+8pp vs Peer" or "-3pp vs Industry" ("vs Peer" once you've opted into peer benchmarking and a peer figure exists; "vs Industry" otherwise, falling back to the published research reference). Because a lower aging share is better, a positive delta (you're aging more than the reference) reads as unfavorable, and a negative delta reads as favorable. The delta only appears when the gap is meaningful, tiny differences are suppressed rather than shown as noise.
Tap it. Opens the Condition tab of the slider, scrolled straight to "Past 80% of expected life", the attention list of every aging unit, each row showing its class and age against expected life (for example, "LGR Dehumidifier · 4.2y of 5y"). The section briefly highlights with a soft ring so you can see where you landed.
Empty state. If no unit in your fleet has a purchase date logged, the tile reads ", " and the gauge doesn't draw at all, there's no age to plot until purchase dates are on file. The Condition tab's aging list, when you have logged ages but nothing has crossed the 80% mark, reads "No units in the aging window, every unit is in its prime."
Calibration OK
What it is. The share of your calibrated-class equipment (moisture meters, thermal cameras, hygrometers, psychrometers) that is currently within its IICRC-recommended calibration cycle. Equipment classes that don't require calibration (air movers, dehumidifiers, extractors) aren't counted in this figure at all.
What you see. The headline is a percentage, "of calibrated-class units" underneath. The preview is a ring, a donut gauge with the percentage printed in its center, toned green at 90% and above, amber from 70% up to 90%, and red below 70%.
Peer delta. When a reference exists, the delta line reads the same way as Aging, a signed percentage-point gap labeled "vs Peer" or "vs Industry". Here, higher is better, so a positive delta (you're more current on calibration than the reference) reads as favorable and a negative delta reads as unfavorable.
Tap it. Opens the Condition tab, scrolled to "Past the IICRC calibration cycle", the list of every overdue instrument, each row showing its class, the calibration cycle length, and how many months it's been since purchase (for example, "Thermal Imaging Camera · 12mo cycle · 18mo since purchase").
Empty state. If you have no calibrated-class equipment logged, or none of it has a purchase date, the tile reads ", " and the ring doesn't draw. On the Condition tab, an empty overdue list reads "All calibrated-class instruments are within cycle."
Rentals
What it is. How much of your fleet is currently on rental rather than owned, leased, or financed, with a preview of which rented units have been out the longest.
What you see. The headline is your count of active rented units. The preview is a bars chart, a horizontal bar per rented unit (up to eight, longest first) sized to how many months it's been out, so a single glance shows whether your rental pressure is concentrated in one long-running unit or spread across several shorter ones.
No peer delta. This tile doesn't carry a benchmark comparison, rental mix varies too much by business model to reduce to one peer number; the class-level rental-rate medians live one level deeper, on the Benchmarks tab.
Tap it. Opens the Condition tab, scrolled to "Rentals past 60 days", the attention list of every rental that has crossed the 60-day mark, each row showing its class and days rented (for example, "Portable Extractor · rented 74d"). Each of these is framed as a rent-vs-buy decision, the unit's own detail view carries the break-even math.
Empty state. With nothing on rental, the bars preview falls back to the same dotted baseline used elsewhere. On the Condition tab, an empty long-rental list reads "No long-running rentals."
Benchmarks
What it is. Your fleet's average age, read against a peer or industry reference where one exists. A younger-than-reference fleet is the favorable read here, since older equipment carries more breakdown and calibration risk.
What you see. The headline is your average unit age in years (for example, "4.2y"), "avg inventory age" underneath. The preview depends on whether Verinode has a comparison point:
- With a reference available: a marker bar, a filled bar showing your value against a tick mark for the peer or industry reference, both scaled to the same axis so the two are directly comparable at a glance. The bar is toned green when your average age is at or under the reference, red when you're running older than it.
- Without a reference: the tile falls back to a distribution histogram of your oldest units (up to eight, oldest first), so the tile still reads as alive even before a benchmark exists to compare against.
No separate peer-delta line. Unlike Aging and Calibration, this tile encodes the comparison directly in the marker visual rather than a text delta underneath.
Tap it. Opens the Benchmarks tab of the slider, not Condition. There you'll find Class Coverage, a per-class breakdown of your active unit counts, and Peer Intelligence, a panel explaining what unlocks as you contribute more equipment data: peer adoption per class, regional rental-rate medians, and the lifespan-to-outcome correlation behind the Equipment × Margin finding. Every contribution here is aggregated on your side of the table; Verinode never sells operator equipment data to carriers or insurers.
Empty state. With no active equipment logged, the tile reads ", " and shows no preview. On the Benchmarks tab itself, an empty inventory reads "Benchmarks populate once you have equipment on file and peer operators in your region have contributed their inventory."
How the deep link works
The three Condition-focused tiles (Aging Units, Calibration OK, Rentals) don't just open the Condition tab, they carry a focus flag through to it. When the tab mounts, it scrolls to the matching section and briefly outlines it with a soft copper ring so your eye lands exactly where the tile said it would, instead of at the top of a long tab you'd have to scroll through. The Condition tab itself opens with an Equipment Readiness cluster of four gauges at the top, Age Index, Calibration, Ownership, and Rental Pressure, before the section you were deep-linked to. All Equipment and Benchmarks route to their own tabs directly, since their content isn't part of Condition.
- 1From
/equipment, scan the Explore row for the metric you care about. - 2Read the peer delta (Aging, Calibration) or the marker (Benchmarks) to see whether you're ahead of or behind the reference.
- 3Tap the tile.
- 4Land on the exact subsection, review the flagged units, and open one to see its full posture (Keep, Service, Retire, or Replace) and the action Verinode recommends.