Six-Step Troubleshooting Procedure
Six-Step Troubleshooting Procedure
You may have the job of maintaining or helping to maintain some piece of equipment, subsystem, or
system. Some of these jobs may be complex, but even a complex job can be broken down into simple
steps. Basically, any troubleshooting and repair of equipment should be done in the following order:
1. Symptom recognition
This is the action of recognizing some disorder or malfunction in equipment.
2. Symptom elaboration
The purpose of this step is to obtain a more detailed description of the trouble. Use available operations
data from HMI/SCADA, meters, and gauges, code monitoring, data table monitoring, programmable
device configurations, operator controls, built-in test equipment, etc., to try to elaborate. What
additional symptoms exist?
6. Failure analysis
This step is multipart. Here you determine:
While not necessarily a part of this step, you may wish to reorder any parts used in repair of the faulty
equipment or any consumable items used during the troubleshooting and repair process.
Based on excerpts from Navy Electricity and Electronics Training Series, Module 19, The Technician’s Handbook, NAVEDTRA 14191, September
1998.