Title of article
Different insights for improving part and system reliability obtained from exactly same DFOM “failure numbers”
Author/Authors
Harold Ascher، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
8
From page
552
To page
559
Abstract
Techniques for improving the reliability and maintainability of both nonrepairable and repairable items can be suggested by failure data analysis. It is shown that a given set of failure numbers leads to very different improvement strategies when the numbers are the times-between-successive-failures of one or more repairable items, rather than the times-to-failure of nonrepairable items. Since this should have been obvious more than 50 years ago, at the onset of formal reliability engineering activities, several reasons are proffered for the widespread and protracted misinterpretation of even the most basic—and simple!—conceptual and practical differences between nonrepairable and repairable items.
Keywords
Maintenance strategies , Repairable systems , Failure data analysis , Basic reliability concepts , Rate of occurrence of failures , Two bathtub curves , Homogeneous Poisson process , Force of mortality , Nonhomogeneous Poisson Process
Journal title
Reliability Engineering and System Safety
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Reliability Engineering and System Safety
Record number
1187611
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