DFMEA
DFMEA
Formulate
development
policy
Definition
Phase
Draft
several
scheduling
proposals
Design
Phase
General
design
Make
tradeoffs
Define system
specifications
Solicit bids
(when using
subcontractors)
Production
process
design
Detailed design
Make prototypes
List
operational
requirements
Production
Phase
Prototype
testing
Qualification
testing
Pilot
production
Pilot evaluation
Full
production
startup
Product launch
Market
stage
House of Quality
QUALITY ELEMENTS
Q-CHARACTERSTIC
CUSTOMER
IMPORTENCE
VOC
CUSTOMER
REQUIRE
MENTS
OR
CR
CUSTOMER
COMPLAINT
DATA
RELATIONSHIP
MATRIX
OR
QFD TABLE- 1
OR
QUALITY TABLE-1
TECHNICAL
BENCHMARKING
PRODUCT PLANNING.
TECHNICAL
STUDY
ITEMS
SUBSYSTEM
DESIGN TARGETS.
RELIABILITY
TARGETS
BOTTLENECK TECHNOLOGY
ISSUES
MECHANISM
- AA
BENCHMARKING
BY CUSTOMER
IMPACTED
COMPONENTS
A , B ,C
QUALITY
PLANNING
CONCEPT
DEVELOPMENTTABLE
BNE ISSUES
COST ISSUE
FMEA table
ACTION PLAN TABLE
DFMEA
FMEA
FAILURE MODES & EFFECTS ANALYSIS (FMEA)
is a paper-and-pencil analysis method used in engineering
to document and explore ways that a product design
might fail in real-world use.
Failure Mode & Effects Analysis is an advanced quality
improvement tool.
FMEA is a technique used to identify, prioritize and
eliminate potential failures from the system, design or
process before they reach the customer.
It provides a discipline for documenting this analysis for
future use and continuous process improvement.
History of FMEA
Historically, FMEA was one of the first systematic
techniques for failure analysis developed by the U.S.
Military on 9th November, 1949. FMEA was implemented
in the 1960s and refined in the 70s. It was used by
reliability engineers working in the aerospace industry.
Then the Automotive Industry Action Group formed by
Chrsyler, Ford & GM restructured the FMEA techniques
which found a lot of importance in the automotive
industry.
Since then FMEA has been instrumental in producing
quality goods in the automotive sector.
Types of FMEAs
Design
Analyzes product design before release to
production, with a focus on product function.
Analyzes systems and subsystems in early
concept and design stages.
Process
Used to analyze manufacturing and assembly
processes after they are implemented.
Types of DFMEA
SYSTEM
FMEA
- Chassis system
- Engine system
- Transmission
COMPONENT FMEA
- Piston
- Crankshaft
FMEA Timeline
Standards
MIL-STD 1629, Procedures for Performing a Failure Mode and Effect
Analysis
IEC 60812, Procedures for Failure Mode and Effect Analysis (FMEA)
BS 5760-5, Guide to failure modes, effects and criticality analysis
(FMEA and FMECA)
SAE ARP 5580, Recommended Failure Modes and Effects Analysis
(FMEA) Practices for Non-Automobile Applications
SAE J1739, Potential Failure Mode and Effects Analysis in Design
(Design FMEA)
SEMATECH (1992,) Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA): A
Guide for Continuous Improvement for the Semiconductor Equipment
Industry
Limitations of FMEA
They can only be used to identify single failures
Detection rate
__ System
__ Subsystem
__ Component
Model Year/Vehicle(s):
Core Team:
Potential
Failure Mode and Effects Analysis
(Design FMEA)
Design Responsibility
Key Date:
FMEA Number:
Page 1 or 1
Prepared by:
FMEA Date (Orig.):
Item
19
Prioritize
FMEA Sequence
Subsystem
Function
Requires
How bad
is it?
What are
the
cause(s)?
How often
does it
happen?
How can this
be prevented
and
detected?
D R Recommen Respons
E P
ded
ibility &
T N Action(s)
Target
E
completi
C
on date
T
I
O
N
Action
results
Act- S O D R
ion E C E .
s V CT P
take
.
n
N
.
FMEA Procedure
List all Function &
requirements
List all conceivable
failure modes
Consider effects, if above
failure mode happens
Look possible causes &
mechanism for
failures mode
Assess the frequency of
occurrence of
failure modes (O)
Re- evaluate
(New RPN )
Define Responsibility
& Time- frame
Recommend
improvements
Calculate the Risk
Priority Number (RPN)
Assess the possibility of
Failure being
detected ( D )
Functional Requirements
Customer Requirements
Legal Requirements
Benchmarking Requirements
State of the Art Trend
Motivation
Analyze the vehicle / engine / system / components
and summarize various functions and failure modes.
Conduct DFMEA various components/systems.
These components & systems all had failure modes
and a corresponding Risk Priority Number (RPN) to
be calculated using severity, occurrence & detection
rankings.
The idea is to reduce this RPN value so that the
components/systems are designed more towards
reliability and safety. These reductions are to be done
through design changes.
Famous Failures
Failure Definitions
Failure: (Noun)
1a- Omission of occurrence or performance,
specifically a failing to perform a duty or expected
action
1b- A state of inability to perform a normal function
1c- A fracturing or giving away under stress
2.- A lack of success
3.- A falling short or deficiency
Deterioration or decay
Failure Definitions
Fail: (Noun)
(a) To lose strength: Weaken
To fade or die away
To stop functioning
To fall short
To be absent or inadequate
To be unsuccessful
( b) To miss performing an expected service or function
To be deficient in: Lack
To leave undone: Neglect
To be unsuccessful in passing (like a test)
Failure Categories
Failure Categories
Reliability
Catastrophic
Complete
Critical
Degradation
Dependent
Gradual
Independent
Inherent
Weakness
Intermittent
Major
Minor
Misuse
Non-relevant
Partial
Primary
Random
Relevant
Secondary
Sudden
Wear-out
Examples
Examples
FAILURE-MODE
FAILURE
Effect of failure mode
Leakage
( Oil / Gas )
Oil leakage
FAILURE
Ranking
10
9
Remote : Failure is
unlikely
Moderate : Occasional
failures
Hazardous
with warning
Very High
High
8
7
Moderate
Low
Very Low
Fit & Finish/ Squeak & Rattle item does not conform. Defect noticed
by most customers (greater than 75%).
Minor
Fit & Finish/ Squeak & Rattle item does not conform. Defect noticed
by 50% of customers.
Very Minor
Fit & Finish/ Squeak & rattle item does not conform. Defect noticed
by discriminating customer (less than 25%).
None
No discernible effect.
Ranking
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Severity
Occurrence
Detection
RPN
Failure Modes
S
E
V
E
R
I
T
Y
POTENTIAL CRITICAL
10
CHARACTERISTICS Safety/Regulatory
9
8
POTENTIAL
SIGNIFICANT
7
CHARACTERISTICS
6
Customer Dissatisfaction
5
4
ANOYANCE
ALL OTHER
ZONE
3
CHARACTERISTICS
2 Appropriate actions /
1 controls already in place
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
OCCURRENCE
Inputs
a
Brainstorming
Process Map
Process History
Procedures
Knowledge
Experience
Outputs
FMEA
Action
Recommend Action, wherever RPN is high through
- Design Controls
- Design changes
- Process changes
- Special controls changes to
standards/procedures/guidelines
Decide Responsibilities
Decide Target date of completion.
What Next?
Repeat: undertake the next revision of the DFMEA
The DFMEA is an evolving document!
Revise the DFMEA frequently & keep on reducing RPN!
Diligence will eliminate design risk!
Include documentation of your results!
PRODUCT CONCEPT
CONCEPTUAL DESIGN
DR1
DR2
DR3
DR4
DR5
OUTLINE DESIGN
DETAILED DESIGN
PROTOTYPE MAKE
TRIL RUN
INITIAL PRODUCTION
MASS PRODUCTION
PRODUCTION
PREPARATION
SUPPLIER
PREPARATION
DR Phase Planning
Validation Definition
The documented act of proving that any
procedure, process, equipment, material, activity
or system, actually leads to the expected results.
Design Validation means establishing by
objective evidence that device specifications
conform to user needs and intended uses.
55
Requirements of
Design Validation
Design validation shall be performed under defined
operating conditions on initial production units, lots or
batches, or their equivalents.
It includes testing of production units under actual or
simulated use conditions.
It includes software validation and risk analysis.
The Validation must be documented in Design
Validation Plan.
Validation Methods
Testing ( Static as well as Dynamic)
Analysis ( Using software's and simulations)
Inspection Methods(Visual or with Test Rigs)
Compilation of relevant scientific literature
Study of historical evidences of similar design
Conclusion
For design of high performance products / systems /
components, quality tools like DFMEA plays an
important role to achieve desirable performance and
durability requirements. If this is done right from
concept stage, the risk of failures substantially
reduces and lot of time, energy and cost is saved.
Design Review is a continuous process of
conforming that the design to the intent & concept
for performance, endurance & warranty is foolproof.
Design Validation Plan is a systematic plan to
confirm that the design meets the desired target
after verification.