DocumentCode :
1196417
Title :
Customer-Rush Near Warranty Expiration Limit, and Nonparametric Hazard Rate Estimation From Known Mileage Accumulation Rates
Author :
Rai, Bharatendra ; Singh, Nanua
Author_Institution :
Ford Motor Co., Dearborn, MI
Volume :
55
Issue :
3
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
480
Lastpage :
489
Abstract :
Time or mileage data obtained from warranty claims are generally more accurate for hard failures than for soft failures. For soft failures, automobile users sometimes delay reporting the warranty claim until the warranty coverage is about to expire. This results in an unusually high number of warranty claims near the end of warranty coverage. Because such a phenomenon of customer-rush near the warranty expiration limit occurs due to user behavior rather than due to the vehicle design, it creates a bias in the warranty dataset. Design improvement activities that use field reliability studies based on such data can potentially obtain a distorted picture of the reality, and lead to unwarranted, costly design changes. Research in the area of field reliability studies using warranty data provides several methods for warranty claims resulting from hard failures, and assumes reported time or mileage as actual time or mileage at failure. In this article, the phenomenon of customer-rush near the warranty expiration limit is addressed for arriving at nonparametric hazard rate estimates. The proposed methodology involves situations where estimates of mileage accumulation rates in the vehicle population are available. The claims influenced by soft failures are treated as left-censored, and are identified using information in technician comments about the repair carried out plus, if required, a more involved engineering analysis of field returned parts. Maximum likelihood estimates for the hazard function and their confidence limits are then obtained using Turnbull´s iterative procedure. An application example illustrates use of the proposed methodology
Keywords :
automotive engineering; failure analysis; hazards; iterative methods; maximum likelihood estimation; reliability; Turnbull´s iterative procedure; automobile; confidence limits; customer-rush phenomenon; hard failures; hazard rate estimation; maximum likelihood estimation; mileage accumulation rate; reliability; repairing; soft failures; vehicle design; warranty expiration limit; Automobiles; Hazards; Maximum likelihood detection; Maximum likelihood estimation; Probability density function; Random variables; Vehicle detection; Vehicle driving; Vehicles; Warranties; Customer-rush; hazard function; mileage accumulation rate; soft failures; warranty data;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Reliability, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9529
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TR.2006.879648
Filename :
1688084
Link To Document :
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