DocumentCode
2290306
Title
Enhancing supportability through life-cycle definitions
Author
Followell, David A.
Author_Institution
McDonnell Douglas Aerosp, St. Louis, MO, USA
fYear
1995
fDate
16-19 Jan 1995
Firstpage
402
Lastpage
409
Abstract
Design specifications for functional systems are typically derived from the extreme environmental conditions expected during their operational use. This practice can result in a system which is extremely over designed, and therefore excessively heavy, expensive and complex. A prime example is the military´s requirement for cold temperature operations of -55 C, a temperature that has not been reached in twenty years. Equally likely, a system design based on operational environments may be inadequately designed since nonoperational environments, such as handling, transportation, storage, and maintenance may have been ignored. If these nonoperational environments prove to drive the durability of the system, failures will occur and the system´s reliability will suffer, resulting in increased life cycle costs and reduced operational readiness. The United States Air Force has recognized this shortcoming in the design process and requires newly developed systems to be designed to endure the environments imposed by the entire life cycle profile-from manufacturing through deployment, operational usage and maintenance. Unfortunately, the procedures and data used to develop these life cycle profiles are not consistent from one development to the next. The Mission Environmental Requirements Integration Technology Program (MERIT) was created to provide a solution to this problem. This technology will result in decreased environmental definition costs, an optimum design for a given application, reduced cycle times and decreased life cycle warranty and maintenance costs
Keywords
environmental factors; maintenance engineering; military equipment; reliability; MERIT program; Mission Environmental Requirements Integration Technology Program; United States Air Force; environmental conditions; environmental definition costs decrease; handling; life cycle costs; life-cycle definitions; maintenance; maintenance costs reduction; military requirement; nonoperational environments; operational readiness reduction; operational usage; reliability; storage; supportability enhancement; transportation; Aerospace electronics; Costs; Design engineering; Magneto electrical resistivity imaging technique; Maintenance; Missiles; Production; Temperature; Transportation; Weapons;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, 1995. Proceedings., Annual
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
ISSN
0149-144X
Print_ISBN
0-7803-2470-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RAMS.1995.513276
Filename
513276
Link To Document