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Failure Effect Mode Analysis

Failure Effect Mode Analysis. By Rajeev Kishore Uros. Great question; a confusion in estimation. How a raw egg bounce?. Tacoma Bridge Collapse. Gondola FMEA. Introduction to FMEA.

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Failure Effect Mode Analysis

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  1. Failure Effect Mode Analysis By Rajeev Kishore Uros

  2. Great question; a confusion in estimation How a raw egg bounce?

  3. Tacoma Bridge Collapse Gondola FMEA

  4. Introduction to FMEA • To introduce new products or manufacturing processes successfully in a cost-effective manner, resources should be allocated up-front to prevent problems. • Fixing the problem after a product is manufactured is more expensive than it is to prevent them.

  5. Benefits of FMEA • Reduce the number of engineering changes • Reduce product development time • Lower start-up cost, and reduces warranty • Greater customer satisfaction • Increased cooperation and teamwork between various functions • A well-documented project history and information database

  6. Do you know? “Failure Modes...” is a misnomer — some sources now call FMEA by another name: “Fault Hazard Analysis.”

  7. Reliability • Failures are expensive • System flakiness is a major source of user frustration - 25% in survey have seen peers kicking their computers - 2% claim to have hit the person next to them in their frustration

  8. Failures are not very well understood No Publicly available data on failures on real systems WHY?

  9. Different types of FMEA • Design (DFMEA): technique used primarily by a Design Responsible Engineer/Team as a means to assure potential failure modes, causes and effects have been addressed for design related characteristics • Process (PFMEA): technique used primarily by a Manufacturing Engineer/Team as a means to assure potential failure modes, causes and effects have been addressed for process related characteristics

  10. The Pre-work

  11. Guide to do FMEA

  12. FMEA Worksheet

  13. Terms and Definitions • Fault • Failure • Function/Process • Examples – 1. Pencil Sharpener 2. Oil changing process

  14. Def. Cont… Failure Mode • The way failure occurs • Can cause a failure mode in another item • Identify and list possible failure modes • Examples – 1. Frequently breaking the graphite 2. Wrong type of oil or No oil added

  15. Def. Cont… Failure Effect • Immediate consequence of a failure • Effects can range from very small to major disasters. • Examples – • Improper writing • Engine wear or Engine Failure

  16. Def. Cont… Severity (SEV) • Worst consequence of a failure • How is it determined? • Standard scale from 1 (no danger) to 10 (very severe) • Prioritize the failures modes and their effects

  17. Def. Cont… Failure Cause • Design weakness - How the failure could occur? • Listed in technical terms and are documented • Examples – 1. Improper mixture of Graphite and Clay 2. Misread oil chart or Hurrying

  18. Def. Cont… Occurrence (O) • Probability of the cause occurring • Look for similar products or processes • Probability number scale from 1 (not likely) to 10 (inevitable) • Detailed development section of FMEA Process

  19. Def. Cont… Current Controls • Current controls that prevent the failure cause (before causing effects) • Examples – 1. improve quality of graphite 2. No control or engine light

  20. Def. Cont… Detection (D) • Assessment of the likelihood that the current controls will detect failure cause or failure, before it reaches the customer. • Different techniques are used by an engineer • Identify the detection number ‘D’, ranging from 1 (easily detectable) to 10 (cannot detect)

  21. Def. Cont… Risk Priority No (RPN) • RPN = S * O * D • Risk that has greatest concern can be identified • Failures are prioritized according to: - Severity - Occurrence - Detection • Requires additional planning or action

  22. Pareto Diagram

  23. Recommended Actions and Results • Address potential failures that have a high RPN • Are any further actions required? • Assign new value for S, O and D, and calculate new RPN value • Update the FMEA as the design or process changes

  24. Development Team • Crucial step in FMEA • FMEA is a team function - Formulate cross functional team - Understand customer requirements – both internal and external inputs - All team members walk and observe the process - Make notes or observations

  25. Link with continuous improvement

  26. FMEA Timing • FMEA should be updated whenever: - At the conceptual stage - Changes are made in the design - New regulations are instituted - Customer feedback indicates a problem

  27. Uses of FMEA • Development of methods to design • Test systems to ensure that the failures are eliminated • Tracking and managing potential risks • Ensuring that failure will not injure customer or impact a system • Evaluation of customer reviews on the problems indicated

  28. TQM Principles • Continuous Improvement Process • Continued building and prevention of failure on the process • Employee Involvement and Empowerment • Employees can feel empowered and involved if they correct an error in a process or part. • Leadership • There needs to be a team leader for every group, which is assigned to one part of the process.

  29. TQM Principles • Performance Measurement • RPN, lower the better • Supplier Partnership • If one supplier has bad parts, it directly affects your products, by creating failure in your company. • End Customer Satisfaction • Reliability meets customer requirements

  30. Limitations • FMEA is limited by the team experience • FMEA may only identify and avoid major failure modes • Multiplication of rankings may result in rank reversals

  31. FMEA Conclusion • Purpose of FMEA, is the process of identifying potential failure modes and their associated causes, assigning severity, Occurrence, and Detection ratings, and calculating RPN • RPNs should be used for continuous improvement activities

  32. Resources http://www.pehwhk.com/Flyers/FAILURE%20MODE%20EFFECT%20ANALYSIS%20_FMEA_.pdf http://www.fmeainfocentre.com/handbooks/fmeamanual.pdf http://www.fmeainfocentre.com/handbooks/umich.pdf. http://www.aluminiumville.co.uk/images/lightbox/aluminium_process.jpg www.nitrd.gov/subcommittee/hec/workshop/20060816/Data/HECIWG-FSIO-2006-Data-Failure-Schroeder.pdf http://www.npd-solutions.com/fmea.html http://www.sigmazone.com/gondola_lift_fmea.htm http://www.suppliermanager-online.com/training/corporation/fmea_training.pdf

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