Fmea 2
Fmea 2
Fmea 2
Effect Analysis
Objective:
• The Breakthrough Strategy
• Warm-up exercise
• Description & definitions
• FMEA basics
• The form
• The method
• Step-by-step example
• Next steps
• Exercise
• Approaches to FMEAs
The Breakthrough Strategy
Step I: Process Measurement
Cumulative Risk
Raw Material
Vague Variation
Workmanship
Standards
Poorly developed
Machine Specification
Reliability Measurement
Limits
Variation (Online
and QC)
• Inputs
– Process map
– C&E matrix
– Process history
– Process technical procedures
• Outputs
– List of actions to prevent causes or to detect
failure modes
– History of actions taken and future activity
Terminology
• Failure Mode :
– a description of a “non-conformance” at a particular process step (also know as a
shop floor defect).
• Failure Effect :
– the effect a particular failure mode will have on the customer (attempt to quantified
with respect to Y's).
• Severity (of failure effect, scale of 1 to 10) :
– an assessment of the seriousness of the failure effect on the customer. The
customer can be the end customer and / or the next process operation.
• Failure Cause :
– something which can be corrected or controlled (X) that describes “how the failure
mode could have occurred”.
• Occurrence (of failure cause, scale of 1 - 10) :
– an assessment of the frequency with which the failure cause occurs. “How often
does this X fail in a specific way”?
• Detection (of failure cause or failure mode, scale of 1 - 10) :
– an assessment of the likelihood (or probability) that your current controls will
detect 1) when the X fails or 2) when the failure mode occurs.
• Risk Priority Number :
– = Severity X Occurrence X Detection.
– used to prioritize recommended actions. Special consideration should be given to
high Severity ratings even if Occurrence and Detection are low.
Definition of Terms - Failure Mode
• Failure Mode
– the way in which a specific process input fails - if not detected and
either corrected or removed, will cause Effect to occur.
• Can be associated with a defect (in discrete manufacturing) or a process
input variable that goes outside of specification.
– Anything that an operator can see that’s wrong is considered a
Failure Mode.
• Continuous Process Examples
– Processing time too long
– Customer waiting time too long
– Temperature too high
• Discrete
– Pits
– Internal Contamination
Definition of Terms - Effect
• Effect
– impact on customer requirements. Generally external customer
focus, but can also include downstream processes.
• Continuous Process Failure Mode/Effect Examples:
– Temperature too high: Melt Viscosity Variable
– Customer waiting time too long: Reduce customer satisfaction
– Application processing time too long: Reduce future customer
• Discrete Process Failure Mode/Effect
– Pits: Internal opens on printed circuit
– Internal Contamination: Short between layers in a multi-layer printed
circuit board
Definition of Terms - Cause
• Cause
– Sources of process variation that causes the Failure
Mode to occur. Identification of Causes should start with
Failure Modes associated with the highest severity
ratings.
• Continuous Process Failure Mode/Cause Examples:
– Temperature Too High: Thermocouple out of calibration
– Customer waiting too long : Less counter being opened
– Application processing time too long: Too many
approval needed
• Discrete Process Failure Mode/Cause Examples
– Pits: High particle count in clean room
– Internal Contamination: Flaking paint
Definition of Terms - Current
Controls
• Current Controls
– systematized methods/devices in place to prevent or detect failure modes
or Causes (before causing effects).
– Prevention consists of fool proofing, automated control and set-up
verifications
– Controls consists of audits, checklists, Inspection, laboratory testing,
training, SOP’s, preventive maintenance, etc.
• Which is more important to process improvement, prevention or detection?
• Continuous Process Cause/Current Controls Examples
– Thermocouple out of calibration: Calibration schedule
– Dowtherm temp too high: Computer Control of primary Dowtherm supply
– Faulty inverter: Inverter infra-red inspection schedule and sign-off
• Discrete Process Cause/Current Controls
– High particle count in clean room: Spc on particle count
– Flaking paint: Evaluation of paint samples to determine source of flakes.
Overview
What is How
S O How can How
D R
Process
Potential Failure Mode
the Effect
Potential Failure Effects E Bad?Potential Causes C Current Controls E P
Actions
Step/Input
What What V C this be well?
T N
Recommended
on the found?
is the can go Outputs?
Input wrong 0 What are 0 0 0 What can
with the the How be done?
Input? 0
Causes?
0
Often? 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
FMEA Model
Cause
Cause
Failure
FailureMode
Mode
(Defect)
(Defect)
Material or process
input Effect
Effect
Process Step
External customer
Controls
Controls or downstream
process step
FMEA Model
Prevention
Detection
Cause
Cause Which is best case?
Which is worst case?
Detection
Failure
FailureMode
Mode
(Defect) Detection
(Defect)
Material or process
input Effect
Effect
Process Step
External customer
or downstream
Controls
Controls process step
Linking Failure Modes to Effects
Failure Mode 1 Effect 1
Failure Mode 2 Effect 2
Effect 1
Failure Mode 1
Effect 2
Failure Mode 1
Effect 1
Failure Mode 2
Note that the relationship between the Failure Mode and the Effect is not
always 1-to-1
Risk Priority Number (RPN)
Prevention
Cause
Detection
Cause
Detection
Failure
FailureMode
Mode
(Defect) Detection
(Defect)
Material or process
input Effect
Effect
Process Step
External customer
or downstream
Controls
Controls process step
Answer
Det = 1
Det = 3
Prevention
Detection
Cause
Cause
Det = 7
Detection
Det = 10
Failure Mode
Failure Mode
(Defect)
Detection
Material or process (Defect)
input Effect
Effect
Process Step
S O D R
Process Actions
Potential Failure Mode Potential Failure Effects E Potential Causes C Current Controls E P
Step/Input Recommended
V C T N
What is the In what ways does the Key What is the impact on the Key What causes the Key Input to What are the existing controls and What are the actions
or FM occur?
cusotmer?
effect to the
0
FMEA Form - Long Term History
D R S O D R
Actions
Current Controls E P Resp. Actions Taken E C E P
Recommended
T N V C T N
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
Methodology
• Advantage
– The Cause & Effect Matrix assists the team in defining the important
issues that the FMEA should address by helping to prioritize
• Important customer requirements
– Process inputs that could potentially impact these requirements
– Prioritizing the Key Process Inputs according to their impact on the
Output variables (We want to focus on Inputs that highly impact a
large number of Outputs first)
– The C&E Matrix also provides quantitative output that can be used in
the determination of the specific severity ratings for the next stage of
the FMEA process.
FMEA - Step by Step
• 1. For each Process Input, determine the ways in which the input can go
wrong (These are Failure Modes)
• 2. For each Failure Mode associated with the inputs, determine Effects:
• 3. Identify potential Causes of each Failure Mode
• 4. List the Current Controls for each Cause
• 5. Assign Severity, Occurrence and Detection ratings to each Cause
• 6. Calculate RPN
• 7. Determine Recommended Actions to reduce High RPN’s
• 8. Take appropriate Actions and Document
• 9. Recalculate RPN’s
C&E Matrix Example
STD
rate that
third
party not
User making out able to Malaysia Telecom
going call PABX system (X) provide service (X)
(C)
Yes
Is that internal No Third party service
No Cos Local calls?
Yes Call? device (X & C)
No
(X) - Critical
IP zone
(N) - Noise
Special
(C) - Controllable rate
provided
by thrid
party
Process mapping
KIPV Process step KPOV
User attitude Telephone bills
User access policy
Phone type
Call procedures
Caller location
User eligibity User making calls
Time of call
Call type
Personal handphone claim
Call method
Call type
Network configuratio
Time of call Call procedures
Network coverage
User access policy
Telephone bills
Provider type
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Rebate rate
Customer
support
Total
KPIV`s with score > 290 points is being carried forward to FMEA analysis next…
19
21
PABX system
IP Zone
Line rates
Network coverage
9
9
5
5
5
5
5
5
230
230
22 PABX system System configuration 7 7 5 5 226
23 TELEKOM Contract 5 9 5 5 222
24 User making calls Caller location 7 5 5 5 210
25 TELEKOM Customer service 5 5 5 5 190
FMEA Worksheet
Before we move to the example let’s look at an FMEA worksheet.
The information on this sheet is transferred directly to the FMEA form.
The purpose of this worksheet is to focus the team on the FMEA inputs
and not on scoring. The scoring should be done after the basic inputs
have been made.
Failure Modes -
Process What can go
Step Key Process Input wrong? Effects Causes Current Controls
Step 1)
1. For each critical (high value) Process Input,
determine the ways in which the input can go wrong
(These are Failure Modes)
S O D R
Potential Failure
Key Process Input Potential Failure Mode E Potential Causes C Current Controls E P
Effects
V C T N
High cost of
Time of call Making calls at peak hours
telephone bills
High cost of
User attitude User making unnecessary calls
telephone bills
Step 3)
3. Identify potential Causes of each Failure Mode
In most cases, there will be more than one Cause for a
Failure Mode. We’ll keep it simple for this exercise.
S O D R
Potential Failure
Key Process Input Potential Failure Mode E Potential Causes C Current Controls E P
Effects
V C T N
Abuse of making calls (un- High cost of FSA does not have proper
User access policy 10
authorized user making calls) telephone bills policy for phone calls
High cost of
User attitude User making unnecessary calls 10 User attitude problem
telephone bills
Step 4)
4. List the Current Controls for each Cause
For each Cause we list how we are either preventing or detecting it. We
would like to place a procedure number wherever we have an SOP.
S O D R
Potential Failure
Key Process Input Potential Failure Mode E Potential Causes C Current Controls E P
Effects
V C T N
Abuse of making calls (un- High cost of FSA does not have proper
User access policy None
authorized user making calls) telephone bills policy for phone calls
High cost of
User attitude User making unnecessary calls User attitude problem None
telephone bills
This is how the FMEA identifies initial holes in the Current Control
Plan. Process teams can start working on these holes right away.
Step 5)
5. Assign Severity, Occurrence and Detection ratings to
each Cause
We are now ready to assign appropriate criteria. The team
then starts scoring each cause to compute an RPN number.
S O D R
Potential Failure
Key Process Input Potential Failure Mode E Potential Causes C Current Controls E P
Effects
V C T N
Abuse of making calls (un- High cost of FSA does not have proper
User access policy 10 8 None 10 800
authorized user making calls) telephone bills policy for phone calls
High cost of
User attitude User making unnecessary calls 10 User attitude problem 8 None 10 800
telephone bills
Approaches to FMEA’s
• Approach One (C&E Matrix Focus)
– Start with Key Inputs with the highest scores from the C&E Matrix analysis
– Fill out the FMEA worksheet for those Inputs
– Calculate RPN’s and develop recommended actions for the highest RPN’s
– Complete the Process FMEA for other Inputs over time
• Approach Two (Customer Focused):
– Fill out the Failure Mode and Effects columns of the worksheet. Copy to FMEA form
and rate Severity.
– For High Severity Ratings, List Causes and rate Occurrence for each Cause
– For the highest Severity * Occurrence Ratings, evaluate Current Controls
– For Highest RPN’s develop recommended actions
• Approach Three (Comprehensive)
– Good approach for small processes
– Fill out the FMEA worksheet beginning with the first process step and ending with the
last
– Score SEV, OCC and DET for all causes
– Develop recommended actions for highest RPN’s
• Approach Four (Super Focused)
– Pick the top Pareto defect item (Fiber Breakouts) or Failure Mode (Variability in
Temperature)
– Focus the FMEA process on only that defect or Failure Mode
– Purpose: To “Kill” that Failure Mode
The End
Next Topic…
MSA Variable