Weibull++ Standard Folio Data CFM-Weibull

From ReliaWiki
Revision as of 20:52, 8 February 2012 by Nicolette Young (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Webnotesbar.png
Standard Folio Competing Failure Modes-Weibull
Weibull++

Often, a group of products will fail due to more than one failure mode.

In order to begin analyzing data sets with more than one competing failure mode, one must perform a separate analysis for each failure mode. During each of these analyses, the failure times for all other failure modes not being analyzed are considered to be suspensions. This is because the units under test would have failed at some time in the future due to the failure mode being analyzed, had the unrelated (not analyzed) mode not occurred. Thus, in this case, the information available is that the mode under consideration did not occur and the unit under consideration accumulated test time without a failure due to the mode under consideration (or a suspension due to that mode).

Once the analysis for each separate failure mode has been completed (using the same principles as before), the resulting reliability equation for all modes is the product of the reliability equation for each mode, or:


[math]\displaystyle{ R(t)={{R}_{1}}(t)\cdot {{R}_{2}}(t)\cdot ...\cdot {{R}_{n}}(t) }[/math]


where [math]\displaystyle{ n }[/math] is the total number of failure modes considered. This is the product rule for the reliability of series systems with statistically independent components, which states that the reliability for a series system is equal to the product of the reliability values of the components comprising the system. In Weibull++ this life distribution can be either the 2-parameter Weibull, lognormal, normal or the 1-parameter exponential.

Competing Failure Modes
See Examples...


Docedit.png