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Systems Reliability Growth Modeling and Analysis

Systems Engineering Program. Department of Engineering Management, Information and Systems. EMIS 7305/5305 Systems Reliability, Supportability and Availability Analysis. Systems Reliability Growth Modeling and Analysis. Dr. Jerrell T. Stracener, SAE Fellow. Leadership in Engineering.

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Systems Reliability Growth Modeling and Analysis

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  1. Systems Engineering Program Department of Engineering Management, Information and Systems EMIS 7305/5305 Systems Reliability, Supportability and Availability Analysis Systems Reliability Growth Modeling and Analysis Dr. Jerrell T. Stracener, SAE Fellow Leadership in Engineering

  2. Reliability Development Test Definitions • MIL-STD-785 Definition • A series of tests conducted to disclose deficiencies • and to verify that corrective actions will prevent • recurrence in the operational inventory (also • known as TAAF testing) • Definition - Narrow View • A reliability development test (RDT) is a dedicated • and specifically designed and conducted test under • usage and maintenance environments that the • equipment is expected to experience during its • service life

  3. Reliability Development Test Definitions - continued • Definition - General View • A reliability development test is any test where • results are designed to improve equipment • reliability

  4. Reliability Growth Test Objective and Purpose • Objective - identify reliability problems early • in the development phase and incorporate • corrective action to preclude recurrence during • service usage • Purpose - improve the reliability of production • equipment by identifying and correcting • deficiencies in the design, selection of parts, • and manufacturing processes

  5. Test, Analyze and Fix (TAAF) • A technique for reliability development and growth that requires that a series of tests be conducted, problems • identified and analyzed, and corrective actions be taken. • TAAF and other reliability growth techniques require a closed loop feedback and corrective action system and follow a common problem solving process: • 1. Detect failures • 2. Feed back problems to designer • 3. Analyze and redesign to correct problem • 4. Incorporate redesign into system • 5. Verify fix by operating system

  6. The TAAF Process • Test analyze and fix (TAAF) is a philosophy • that can be applied to any test • - Data for all failures/problems should • be used for TAAF • - This approach decreases the likelihood • of major problems in service • Data from each failure/problem from every • test conducted on an item should be analyzed • for corrective action, positive fix and verification • of the fix

  7. TAAF Benefits TAAF provides the means to accelerate design and reliability maturity through the corrective actions taken for design performance/reliability problems identified. TAAF provides advanced information related to how the design will work in the field during the early years of deployment.

  8. Selection Criteria for RDT • Major contributor to system (end-item) failure rate • New development or application • High unit cost • Experience indicates need for improvement

  9. Reliability Test Length Fixed length - 400 to 10,000 hours (chamber hours) various tests over past 10 years mostly avionics and electronics - Easy to price - Avoids numbers game of when to stop testing Truncated - Stop testing when corrective action rate reaches a specified level - Difficult to price - Analysis of data becomes more important

  10. Reliability Growth Management • Planning the reliability growth necessary to • meet program objectives as a function of • program schedule • Planning of tasks and program resources • necessary to achieve the planned growth • - Reliability test data • - Failure analysis • - Corrective action • Assessment and forecast of reliability growth • relative to plan • - Provides early warning of program • reliability problem

  11. Reliability Growth • Reliability growth is the positive improvement • of system reliability through the systematic and • permanent removal of the reasons for failure • Reliability improvements can be achieved • through testing to identify deficiencies and/or • weaknesses, followed by positive actions to • correct them. Test, analyze, and fix (TAAF) is • one process for achieving reliability growth.

  12. Reliability Growth - continued • Growth curves are management tools; they • show the manager where the system reliability • is now and where is must go • Air Force Regulation 800-18, Air Force reliability • and maintainability program, requires the use of • reliability growth curves to track improvements • to achieve reliability requirements

  13. Reliability Growth Curves • Decision makers can use reliability growth curves • to assess the need to reallocate resources or • change schedules to achieve R&M requirements

  14. DOD Policy on Reliability Growth and Testing • DOD 5000.40 requires that a period of testing • be scheduled with each intermediate milestone • for purposes of finding design and manufacturing • defects • AFR 800-18 is intended to implement the • requirements of DOD 5000.40 and implies • reliability growth by such statements as ‘terms • are expressed in mature system values along • with interim thresholds’

  15. DOD Policy on Reliability Growth and Testing • MIL-STD-785 states that a properly balanced • reliability program will emphasize ESS and • RD/GT. It also notes that RD/GT must not • include accept/reject criteria because the • contractors interest in passing a test would be • in conflict with the purpose of doing a RD/GT • MIL-HDBK-781

  16. Reliability Growth Models

  17. Reliability Growth Model Types Engineering Statistical models models Deterministic Models Poisson Process Time Series models Endless-Burn-In AMSAA/Duane ARIMA Cox-Lewis Modified Duane

  18. The Duane Model • In 1964 J.T Duane, with General Electric Company, published a paper in the IEEE Transactions on Aerospace (Vol. 2, No. 2, April 1964) titled “Learning Curve Approach to Reliability Monitoring.” • Duane formulated a mathematical relationship for forecasting and monitoring reliability improvement as a function of cumulative time. • The model was based on concluding, from analysis of data, that a straight line provided a reasonably good fit to cumulative MTBF vs. cumulative time when plotted on a log-log scale.

  19. Reliability Growth Analysis • To meet reliability goals, a technique must be • used to track reliability and signal when corrective • action should be taken • J.T. Duane • (1964) noticed • that in many • cases this • relationship • followed a • straight • line on a • log-log plot

  20. Jet Engine Control System Reliability - Growth

  21. The Duane Model • The Duane Model can be formulated in two different, • but mathematically equivalent, ways: MTBF as a • Function of time and failure rate as a function of time. • In terms of MTBF, the Duane Model is: • where MTBFc(t) is the cumulative MTBF at cumulative • time t, t is cumulative time, and  and  are • parameters of the model.

  22. The Duane Model The parameter  is the reliability improvement, or growth, rate and  is cumulative MTBF at t=1 hour. Notice that the graph of the Duane Model on log-log scale is a straight line since log MTBF(t) = log k +  log t which is of the form y = a + bx

  23. The Duane Model Since where rc=the cumulative number of failures in time t,

  24. The Duane Model Then But since

  25. The Duane Model • The instantaneous MTBF as a function of • cumulative test time is obtained mathematically • from MTBFC(t) and is given by • where MTBFi(t) is the instantaneous MTBF at time • t and is interpreted as the equipment MTBF if • reliability development testing was terminated after • a cumulative amount of testing time, t.

  26. 1000 Instantaneous MTBF 100 Cumulative 10 1000 10 100 10000 Cumulative Test Hours MTBF Growth Curves

  27. The Duane Model • The Duane Model may also be formulated in • terms of equipment failure rate as a function of • cumulative test time as follows: • and • where • C(t) is the cumulative failure rate after test time t • k* is the initial failure rate and k*=1/k, • B is the failure rate growth (decrease rate) • i(t) is the instantaneous failure rate at time t

  28. The Duane Model The initial MTBF or failure rate at the beginning of RDT depends on a number of other factors including type of equipment (electronics, structure, etc.) complexity of the design and equipment operation, technology, in terms of MTBF of failure rate, depends on the same factors as does the starting value, and this in addition depends on management FRACAS and TAAF implementation.

  29. Failure Rate and MTBF

  30. AMSAA/Duane Model - plotted with group data

  31. AMSAA/Duane Model - plotting the data and solving for  and 

  32. AMSAA/Duane Model - plotting by MTBF

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