arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All Acoustic End-of-Line Test Systems See All DAQ and instruments See All Electroacoustics See All Software See All Transducers See All Vibration Testing Equipment See All Academy See All Resource Center See All Applications See All Industries See All Insights See All Services See All Support See All Our Business See All Our History See All Our Sustainability Commitment See All Global Presence
arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All Actuators See All Combustion Engines See All Durability See All eDrive See All Production Testing Sensors See All Transmission & Gearboxes See All Turbo Charger See All DAQ Systems See All High Precision and Calibration Systems See All Industrial electronics See All Power Analyser See All S&V Hand-held devices See All S&V Signal conditioner See All Test Solutions See All DAQ Software See All Drivers & API See All nCode - Durability and Fatigue Analysis See All ReliaSoft - Reliability Analysis and Management See All Test Data Management See All Utility See All Vibration Control See All Acoustic See All Current / voltage See All Displacement See All Load Cells See All Pressure See All Strain Gauges See All Torque See All Vibration See All LDS Shaker Systems See All Power Amplifiers See All Vibration Controllers See All Accessories for Vibration Testing Equipment See All Training Courses See All Whitepapers See All Acoustics See All Asset & Process Monitoring See All Custom Sensors See All Data Acquisition & Analysis See All Durability & Fatigue See All Electric Power Testing See All NVH See All Reliability See All Smart Sensors See All Vibration See All Weighing See All Automotive & Ground Transportation See All Calibration See All Installation, Maintenance & Repair See All Support Brüel & Kjær See All Release Notes See All Compliance See All Our People
arrow_back_ios

Main Menu

See All CANHEAD See All GenHS See All LAN-XI See All MGCplus See All Optical Interrogators See All QuantumX See All SomatXR See All Accessories See All Accessories See All BK Connect / Pulse See All API See All Microphone Sets See All Microphone Cartridges See All Acoustic Calibrators See All Special Microphones See All Microphone Pre-amplifiers See All Sound Sources See All Accessories for acoustic transducers See All Experimental testing See All Transducer Manufacturing (OEM) See All Accessories See All Non-rotating (calibration) See All Rotating See All CCLD (IEPE) accelerometers See All Charge Accelerometers See All Impulse hammers / impedance heads See All Cables See All Accessories See All Electroacoustics See All Noise Source Identification See All Environmental Noise See All Sound Power and Sound Pressure See All Noise Certification See All Industrial Process Control See All Structural Health Monitoring See All Electrical Devices Testing See All Electrical Systems Testing See All Grid Testing See All High-Voltage Testing See All Vibration Testing with Electrodynamic Shakers See All Structural Dynamics See All Machine Analysis and Diagnostics See All Calibration Services for Transducers See All Calibration Services for Handheld Instruments See All Calibration Services for Instruments & DAQ See All On-Site Calibration See All Resources See All Software License Management

How to Effectively Plan for FMEA Challenges to Improve Quality and Save Costs

A commercial developer of precision special-purpose test equipment asked us for guidance and review of their newly developed Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA) program for one of their automated test systems. In this case reliability was important to lessen lost time/revenue impact. If the test equipment failed during the week-long test sequence, the test had to start from the beginning – severely hurting the customer’s production schedule and threatening the reputation of the test equipment manufacturer. The analysis was a unique challenge because the FMEA focused on the software that controlled the test equipment, rather than on the test equipment hardware which was largely commercial off-the-shelf (COTS).

Thanks to the early efforts of the military and aerospace industries to prove the merits of FMEA, this analysis has been shown to be applicable to commercial organizations as a means to identify ways to save money in long term products and projects, as in the above example. FMEA helps to find unacceptable consequences of every kind of component failure, identifies undesirable (but perhaps acceptable if unlikely) consequences of component failures, and improves system reliability by identifying weak links in the reliability chain – finding where the aggregate reliability of the product might be improved by use of alternate components, or by design changes.

An FMEA can be a tedious undertaking, which means without the right expertise it can be error-prone. Fortunately, this can be mitigated by a structured process that guides the effort and assures that the analysts remain on the right track.
XFMEA article - hardware FMEA step 1 decide the level of abstraction

Step 1

 

You must first decide what the lowest level of abstraction will be for the analysis. For a hardware FMEA, these could be electronic components like transistors, hardware modules like signal conditioning circuits that occupy part of a circuit board, whole circuit boards, and so forth. For a software FMEA, these components could be variables, messages and control signals among modules, modules themselves, etc.

Step 2

 

You must then establish analysis rules that the stakeholders and analysts can agree that make sense for a particular FMEA given its ultimate application. The idea is to assure that each analyst considers the same possible failure modes of the same kinds of low-level components, provides consistent descriptions of the components and their failure modes, and describes effects of mid-level failures and system-level failures in a consistent way. We have found that capturing mid-level and system-level failure effects in tables – shared by all analysts – makes it faster to proceed and avoids different people finding different ways to describe the same thing. Better yet, the table of system-level effects contains severity ratings for each effect (on a simple scale where the most severe effects are usually represented as 1 and benign effects as 4), so the severity figures predicted by different people for the same system-level effects are pre-agreed upon and consistent. The tables also make quality review of the FMEA easier and faster if worksheet cells are linked to table entries – allowing for the most efficient coordination amongst the team.

XFMEA article - hardware FMEA step 2 establish rules
XFMEA article - hardware FMEA step 3 full understanding of the system

Step 3

 

You must have full understanding of the system to be analyzed. Especially for large or complex systems, someone should be appointed as analysis manager, and that person should assign parts of the analysis to appropriately qualified people – if the effort is to be run efficiently. Each person should become an expert on his/her assigned portion of the system and remain productive in their domain. In a system with hardware and software, system-level consequences of hardware failures that are manifested by software should be determined by the appropriate software person, and vice versa.

Step 4

 

The fourth step is performing the analysis and reviewing progress along the way. Fortunately, following the first three steps makes the effort easier, more efficient, and of better quality – where better quality means better consistency, thoroughness and usefulness. After all, the purpose of the FMEA is to gain clarity on the reliability of the system and the available options to bolster that reliability.

plan-fmea4

We have found that this approach works well for every kind of FMEA and we continually pursue process improvements. We are confident that if you have a product which is in production or has a long lifespan, an FMEA can ultimately save lifecycle cost and increase customer satisfaction through reduction of defects and the delays they cause. Explore HBM Prenscia Engineering Services and Solutions for more information and technical papers on this, and many other related topics.

Ready to take your reliability program further?