02 Reliability Maintainability Availability
02 Reliability Maintainability Availability
Maintenance planning
Reliability, Maintainability and Availability
Maintainabi
lity
Reliability
Availabil
ity
Maintenance planning
GP
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Reliability
1.
2.
A probability measure.
Adequate performance (Intended Function)
Duration of Performance (Time)
Operating condition specified
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Reliability is
Quantifiable
1.
2.
A design feature.
Not same as performance.
3.
4.
Not Quality
5.
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Maintenance planning
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1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
6
Life cycle cost analysis can prove that although the initial
cost of their product might be higher, the overall lifetime cost
is lower
Competitive advantage
Maintenance planning
GP
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MEASURES OF RELIABILITY
1.
G P Kurien
These two measures are the mirror image of each other The
reliability will start at 1 and decay to approach 0 over time. The
cumulative distribution of failure will start at 0 (no failures)
and approach 1 as all the items fail over time. The slope of the
reliability curve at any time t is the failure rate at that point in
time. These measures give the overall reliability or failure at
time t
Maintenance planning
3.
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2.
Reliability Measurement
Mean time between failures (MTBF)
1. MTBF is the predicted elapsed time between
inherent failures of a system during operation.
2. MTBF can be calculated as the arithmetic mean
(average) time between failures of a system.
3. The MTBF is typically part of a model that assumes
the failed system is immediately repaired as a part
of a renewal process.
4. Eg. An aircraft operates for 9000hrs with 3 failures;
then:
MTBF = 90003=3000hrs
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Maintenance planning
GP
9/13/16
Cost
Ow
l
a
Tot
hi
s
r
ne
t
os
C
p
ost
C
se
a
h
c
o st
C
.
t
Pur
n
i
Unsc
d Ma
e
l
h
u
d
Main eduled
Sche
tena
nce
Co st
Level of
Reliability
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Maintenance planning
GP
9/13/16
Cost
To
Ow
l
ta
hi
s
r
ne
o
pC
Level of
Reliability
1.
2.
Relatively small increments in the demand for reliability, increase the cost of
design and manufacture enormously and often place unworkable limitations on
the operating conditions.
3.
In many such cases, the cost of even a single failure is very high, as it takes
very long to set it right. Then, maintainability improvement has been found to
offer a substantially cheaper solution
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Maintenance planning
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1.
2.
Load Sharing
Standby Redundancy
3.
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Hot Stand by
Cold Stand by
Maintenance planning
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Maintainability
Maintainability : Definition
The probability that the equipment will
be restored to certain specific conditions,
within a given period, when maintenance
action is taken, in accordance with
prescribed procedures and resources.
The aim of maintainability is to reduce down time of the
equipment
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Maintenance planning
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Maintainability
1.
2.
3.
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Maintenance planning
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Design for
Maintainability
Maint.
in
minimu
m time
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Maint.
in
minimu Safety
m
effort
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3.
4.
5.
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Measures of Maintainability
Mean Time to Repair (MTTR)
1.
2.
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Maintenance planning
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Maintenance Vs Maintainability
1.
2.
3.
4.
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GP
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Availability
Availability
1.
MTBF
A
MTBF MTTR
22
9/13/16
Reliability Measurement
Mean time between failures (MTBF)
1. MTBF is the predicted elapsed time between
inherent failures of a system during operation.
2. MTBF can be calculated as the arithmetic mean
(average) time between failures of a system.
3. The MTBF is typically part of a model that assumes
the failed system is immediately repaired as a part
of a renewal process.
4. Eg. An aircraft operates for 9000hrs with 3 failures;
then:
MTBF = 90003=3000hrs
23
Maintenance planning
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Measures of Maintainability
Mean Time to Repair (MTTR)
1.
2.
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Maintenance planning
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Example.
The details of failures and time to repair the
equipment each time for two equipments in a
period of one year are given below. Calculate
MTTR, MTBF, and Availability
1.
EQUIPMENT
15
12
Solution
EQUIPMEN
T
MTTR
(Days)
MTBF
(Days)
AVAILABILITY
52
0.94
12
120
0.90
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2.
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Maintenance planning
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Maintenance planning
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5.
6.
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Maintenance planning
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All these time elements are not always present in every single
repair action. Generally, one or more of the above
elements to time will always be present in every repair
action.
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Maintenance planning
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The A B C Principle
1.
2.
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Maintenance planning
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4.
5.
6.
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Maintenance planning
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Cost of Repair
Crews & Shops,
Spare Parts, and
Standby Machines
Cost of
Interruptions to
Production
0
Slow
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Total Costs
of Repairs
Fast
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An equipment
breakdown
should trigger
two actions
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Development of a
program to eliminate
cause of the
malfunction and
need for such repairs
in the future
Maintenance planning
GP
9/13/16