Project & Quality Management
Project & Quality Management
Quality Management
Reliability
Reliability Management
Why is it needed?
Reliable operation of critical equipment
Planning of maintenance activities
Improved quality of an item
Reliability Management
Reliability management is concerned with
performance and conformance over the
expected life of the product
piece of equipment
performs its intended function for a stated period of time
under specified operation conditions
Definition of Reliability
The definition has four important elements:
Probability
Time
Performance
Operating conditions
Definition of Reliability
Probability
A value between 0 and 1
Precise meaning
e.g. probability of 0.97 means that 97 of 100
items will still be working at stated time
under stated conditions
Definition of Reliability
Performance
Some criterion to define when product has
failed
e.g. bearing clearances in an engine or amount
of emissions from a car
Definition of Reliability
Operating conditions
These describe the operating conditions that
correspond to the stated product life. e.g. for a
car engine this might mean
Speed
Loading
Effects of an expected amount of
misuse such as over-revving and stalling.
Reliability Measurement
This is based on the Failure Rate
i.e.
Items Failed
Failure rate
Total Operating Time
D
B
Bathtub Curve
A-B Early Failure
Teething problems. Caused by design/material
flaws
Items Failed
Procedure
To establish reliability of an item:
Conduct a series of tests until a number of
them fail.
Calculate failure rate (Lambda).
Calculate reliability for a given time using
Example
Trial data shows that 105 items failed during
a test with a total operating time of 1 million
hours. (For all items i.e. both failed and
passed).
105
4
1.05 x10
The failure rate
1000000
Example
Find the reliability of the product after 1000
hours i.e. (t) =1000
Reliability at 1000 hours:
R(1000)
= 0.9