DocumentCode :
3469558
Title :
AFR: problems of definition, calculation and measurement in a commercial environment
Author :
Elerath, Jon G.
Author_Institution :
IBM Storage Syst. Div., San Jose, CA, USA
fYear :
2000
fDate :
2000
Firstpage :
71
Lastpage :
76
Abstract :
Most commercial enterprises want a meaningful yet simple method for determining product reliability. “Average”, “annual” or “annualized” failure rates are selected because of their apparent simplicity. All involve some sort of “failure rate” averaging over some period of time. All are abbreviated AFR even though there are no accepted industry standard definitions for these terms or the processes and conditions for their measurement. If the failure rate is not constant in time, creating an average can easily generate meaningless results. A number of businesses use the term “failure rate” but are in fact calculating probabilities or time independent percentages. A basic premise for this paper is that the true underlying product failure rates are not constant in time. This paper presents a detailed discussion of different ways commercial industries calculate simple failure rate based metrics. It identifies some ambiguities in the definitions and resultant inaccuracies. It will help the reliability pundit understand the mathematical considerations, making him more aware of potential problems. This paper should help generalists and managers understand that the AFR´s they calculate may be significantly different than those calculated by their suppliers and customers. This can result in substantially different numbers and conclusions. Averaging instantaneous failure rates should be done only to smooth data collected from a distribution known to have a constant failure rate
Keywords :
Weibull distribution; failure analysis; reliability theory; Weibull distribution; annual failure rate; annualized failure rate; average failure rate; commercial environment; commercial industries; failure rate averaging; mechanical reliability; probabilities calculation; product failure rates; product reliability; time independent percentages calculation; Business; Disk drives; Engineering management; Hazards; Measurement standards; Mechanical variables measurement; Probability; Product design; Reliability engineering; Weibull distribution;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, 2000. Proceedings. Annual
Conference_Location :
Los Angeles, CA
ISSN :
0149-144X
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5848-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/RAMS.2000.816286
Filename :
816286
Link To Document :
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