Title :
Modeling reliability growth in the product design process
Author :
Krasich, Milena ; Quigley, John ; Walls, Lesley
Author_Institution :
Bose Corp., Massachusetts, USA
Abstract :
Relying on reliability growth testing to improve system design is not always cost effective and certainly not efficient. Instead, it is important to design in reliability. This requires models to estimate reliability growth in the design and to assess whether goal reliability will be achieved within the target timescale. While many models have been developed for analysis of reliability growth in test, there has been less attention given to reliability growth in design. This paper proposes and compares two models - one motivated by the practical engineering process (the modified power law) and the other by extending the reasoning of statistical reliability growth modeling (the modified IBM). The commonalities and differences between these models are explored through an assessment of their logic and an application. We conclude that the choice of model depends on the growth process being modeled. Key drivers are the type of system design and the project management of the growth process. When the design activities are well understood and project workloads can be managed evenly, leading to predictable and equally spaced modifications each of which having a similar effect on the reliability of the item, then the modified power law is a more appropriate model. On the other hand, the modified IBM is more appropriate for more uncertain situations, where the reliability improvement of a design is driven by the removal of faults, which are yet unknown and only through further investigation of the design, these can be identified. These situations have less predictable workloads and fewer modifications are likely later on in the project.
Keywords :
fault diagnosis; product design; project management; reliability; statistical analysis; fault removal; modified power law; practical engineering process; predictable workloads; product design process; project management; reliability growth modeling; statistical reliability growth modeling; system design type; Costs; Logic; Power engineering and energy; Power system modeling; Power system reliability; Product design; Project management; Reliability engineering; System analysis and design; System testing;
Conference_Titel :
Reliability and Maintainability, 2004 Annual Symposium - RAMS
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8215-3
DOI :
10.1109/RAMS.2004.1285486