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Institute for Manufacturing |
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Design Management Group ContactJames Moultrie Tel: +44 1223 764830
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FMEA (Failure Modes and Effects Analysis)A tool to enable potential errors or faults to be predicted during the early design stages. DescriptionMany companies use FMEA as a central pillar of their design process. FMEA provides a structured approach to the analysis of route causes (of failure), the estimation of severity or impact, and the effectiveness of strategies for prevention. The ultimate output is the generation of action plans to prevent, detect or reduce the impact of potential modes of failure. In a nutshell, it encourages the design team to consider:
FMEA emerged from the US Military in the late 1940s as a tool to improve the evaluation of reliability of equipment. Its benefits quickly became apparent and it was adopted by aerospace industries and NASA during the Apollo programme in the 1960s. It was later taken up by many of the larger automotive companies, including Ford in the 1970s. It has since become a core tool in product development in many organisations and is recommended as a part of an organisation's quality management system. The basic logic can be applied at a number of levels, including organisational issues, strategy issues, product design issues, production processes and individual components. Typically, it is used to analyse either a product design or production process: Product or Design FMEAWhat could go wrong with a product while in service as a result of a weakness in design?
Process FMEAWhat could go wrong with a product during manufacture or while in service as a result of non-compliance to specification or design? Typically, the information is collated and presented in a tabular format, as shown below:
Method1. Level of analysisThe analysis can be carried out at a project, product, system, subsystem or component level. It is important to be clear about the level at which the current analysis is taking place. A hierarchical organisation of analysis enables the design team to drill down to detail where appropriate. 2. Date & prepared byTo record who was involved and when the analysis took place. 3. FMEA number & reference informationClear numbering is important, to enable the team to trace an analysis from system to component level. It may also be important to reference any important test results, documents or drawings here. 4. System / component / functionThe specific name / number of the element or issues under study. 5. Potential Failure ModesThe manner in which a component, subsystem or system could possibly fail while being used. Here the design team must be creative in seeking ideas for all potential modes of failure. Ask open and general questions: How can it fail? Under what conditions? What types of use? etc. 6. Potential Effects of FailureFor each mode of failure, what will the likely effect be? How would the failure affect different stakeholders? What will be the likely outcomes if the system or component fails? Provide as detailed description as is necessary of the potential impact of failure. An individual failure mode may have many possible effects. 7. Severity ratingEach failure effect can be judged for it's potential seriousness. Typically, this is done by scoring the effect on a 1 to 5 (or 10) scale. This value should be discussed and negotiated by all members of the team. A team may wish to define for itself the severity to go with each score, below is a suggested scheme: Rating Criteria5 (9-10) With potential safety risk or legal problems - potential loss of life or major dissatisfaction 8. Critical?A column is provided to enable the rapid identification of potentially critical failures which must be addressed (e.g. safety issues, sales issues etc.) 9. Potential Cause / Mechanisms of FailureEach failure mode will have an underlying root cause. Thus, it is important to spend time to establish the potential root causes or mechanisms of failure, by asking ' what is the likely cause of the failure mode? ' Possible causes could include: Wrong tolerances, poor alignment, operator error, component missing, fatigue, defective components, maintenance required, environment etc. 10. Occurrence RankingIt is also necessary to consider the likelihood of the potential failure occurring. Here, a 'probability' assessment is made by the team and scored on a 1 to 5 (or 10) scale. Possible occurrence ratings (you can define them in other ways) are shown below: Rating Criteria
5 (9-10) Very high probability of occurrence This section is critical in the FMEA procedure and each of the responses categorised as very high or high should be considered and addressed. 11. Current design controlsAre there any design controls which aim to reduce or eliminate the potential failure? These could include labels, barriers, instructions or total redesigns. Other controls could include prototyping, evaluation or possibly market surveys. 12. Detection ratingThe final rating aims to establish how 'detectable' the potential fault will be. Will it be instantly noticeable or will it not be apparent. In addition, how likely is it that the controls listed will enable the detection of the potential failure? Suggested ratings on a scale of 1 to 5 (or 10): Rating Criteria
5 (9 or 10) Zero probability of detecting the potential failure cause If the FMEA is being carried out at a 'project' level, then it can be beneficial to consider this value as 'reactability'. Will it be possible to react to the failure rapidly enough to reduce its impact sufficiently? 13. Risk Priority Number (RPN)It is likely that the team will have identified many possible failure modes and effects. Each one needs to be assigned a 'Risk Priority Number' to enable the prioritisation of mitigating action. The RPN is simply the product of the severity, occurrence and detection ratings: RPN = Severity rating x Occurrence rating x Detection rating - perhaps more easily remembered as: RPN= S*O*D The RPN value gives an indicator of the design risk and generally, the items with the highest RPN and severity ratings should be given first consideration. 14. Recommended actionsFollow up is essential and actions to reduce the impact or likelihood are essential These actions should be specific and preferably measurable. Attention should be given to actions that address the root cause and not the symptoms. 15. ResponsibilityFinally, all actions should be clearly allocated (to an individual, department and/or organisation) and a clear deadline given. 16. Additional columns if wanted:Some FMEA users add additional columns to record the actual actions taken or keep an update on the status of actions. It can also be a good idea to revise the RPN value following the corrective action. This enables full trace-ability between potential problems and the outcomes of actions. |
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