FMEA
FMEA
FMEA
Other Guidelines
• Other industry and company-specific guidelines
exist. For example:
– EIA/JEP131 provides guidelines for the
electronics industry, from the JEDEC/EIA.
– P-302-720 provides guidelines for NASA’s GSFC
spacecraft and instruments.
– SEMATECH 92020963A-ENG for the
semiconductor equipment industry.
– Etc…
FMEA is a Tool
• FMEA is a tool that allows you to:
– Prevent System, Product and Process problems
before they occur
– reduce costs by identifying system, product and
process improvements early in the development
cycle
– Create more robust processes
– Prioritize actions that decrease risk of failure
– Evaluate the system,design and processes from a
new vantage point
A Systematic Process
• FMEA provides a systematic process to:
– Identify and evaluate
• potential failure modes
• potential causes of the failure mode
– Identify and quantify the impact of potential failures
– Identify and prioritize actions to reduce or eliminate
the potential failure
– Implement action plan based on assigned
responsibilities and completion dates
– Document the associated activities
Purpose/Benefit
• cost effective tool for maximizing and
documenting the collective knowledge,
experience, and insights of the engineering
and manufacturing community
• format for communication across the
disciplines
• provides logical, sequential steps for
specifying product and process areas of
concern
Benefits of FMEA
• Contributes to improved designs for products and
processes.
– Higher reliability
– Better quality
– Increased safety
– Enhanced customer satisfaction
• Contributes to cost savings.
– Decreases development time and re-design costs
– Decreases warranty costs
– Decreases waste, non-value added operations
• Contributes to continuous improvement
Benefits
• Cost benefits associated with FMEA are usually
expected to come from the ability to identify failure
modes earlier in the process, when they are less
expensive to address.
– “rule of ten”
• If the issue costs $100 when it is discovered in
the field, then…
• It may cost $10 if discovered during the final
test…
• But it may cost $1 if discovered during an
incoming inspection.
• Even better it may cost $0.10 if discovered
during the design or process engineering phase.
FMEA as Historical Record
• Communicate the logic of the
engineers and related design and
process considerations
•EXAMPLE:
•HVAC system must defog windows and heat or cool cabin to 70
degrees in all operating conditions (-40 degrees to 100 degrees)
• - within 3 to 5 minutes
• or
• - As specified in functional spec #_______; rev. date_________
Potential Failure mode
• Definition: the manner in which a system,
subsystem, or component could potentially fail to
meet design intent
• Ask yourself- ”How could this design fail to meet
each customer requirement?”
• Remember to consider:
– absolute failure
– partial failure
– intermittent failure
– over function
– degraded function
– unintended function
Failure Mode
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLES:
•HVAC system does not heat vehicle or defog windows
• HVAC system takes more than 5 minutes to heat vehicle
•HVAC system does not heat cabin to 70 degrees in below
zero temperatures
•HVAC system cools cabin to 50 degrees
•HVAC system activates rear window defogger
Consider Potential failure modes
under:
• Operating Conditions
– hot and cold
– wet and dry
– dusty and dirty
• Usage
– Above average life cycle
– Harsh environment
– below average life cycle
Consider Potential failure modes
under:
• Incorrect service operations
– Can the wrong part be substituted inadvertently?
– Can the part be serviced wrong? E.g. upside down,
backwards, end to end
– Can the part be omitted?
– Is the part difficult to assemble?
• Describe or record in physical or technical terms,
not as symptoms noticeable by the customer.
Potential Effect(s) of Failure
• Definition: effects of the failure mode on the function as
perceived by the customer
• Ask yourself- ”What would be the result of this failure?”
or “If the failure occurs then what are the consequences”
• Describe the effects in terms of what the customer might
experience or notice
• State clearly if the function could impact safety or
noncompliance to regulations
• Identify all potential customers. The customer may be an
internal customer, a distributor as well as an end user
• Describe in terms of product performance
Effect(s) of Failure
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLE:
•Cannot see out of front window
•Air conditioner makes cab too cold
•Does not get warm enough
•Takes too long to heat up
Examples of Potential Effects
• Noise • Intermittent operations
• loss of fluid • rough surface
• seizure of adjacent • unpleasant odor
surfaces • poor appearance
• loss of function • potential safety hazard
• no/low output • Customer dissatisfied
• loss of system
Severity
• Definition: assessment of the seriousness of
the effect(s) of the potential failure mode on
the next component, subsystem, or
customer if it occurs
• Severity applies to effects
• For failure modes with multiple effects, rate
each effect and select the highest rating as
severity for failure mode
Severity
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLE:
•Cannot see out of front window – severity 9
•Air conditioner makes cab too cold – severity 5
•Does not get warm enough – severity 5
•Takes too long to heat up – severity 4
Classification
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLE:
•Cannot see out of front window – severity 9 – incorrect vent location –
occurrence 2
•Air conditioner makes cab too cold – severity 5 - Incorrect routing of vent hoses (too
close to heat source) – occurrence 6
Potential Cause(s)/Mechanism(s) of
failure
• Definition: an indication of a design
weakness, the consequence of which is the
failure mode
• Every conceivable failure cause or
mechanism should be listed
• Each cause or mechanism should be listed
as concisely and completely as possible so
efforts can be aimed at pertinent causes
Cause(s) of Failure
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLE:
•Incorrect location of vents
•Incorrect routing of vent hoses (too close to heat
source)
•Inadequate coolant capacity for application
Potential Cause Mechanism
• Tolerance build up •Yield
• insufficient material
• •Fatigue
insufficient lubrication capacity
• Vibration •Material instability
• Foreign Material
• Interference •Creep
• Incorrect Material thickness specified
•Wear
• exposed location
• temperature expansion •Corrosion
• inadequate diameter
• Inadequate maintenance instruction
• Over-stressing
• Over-load
• Imbalance
• Inadequate tolerance
Occurrence
• Definition: likelihood that a specific
cause/mechanism will occur
• Be consistent when assigning occurrence
• Removing or controlling the
cause/mechanism though a design change is
only way to reduce the occurrence rating
Occurrence
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLE:
•Incorrect location of vents – occurrence 3
•Incorrect routing of vent hoses (too close to
heat source) – occurrence 6
•Inadequate coolant capacity for application –
occurrence 2
Current Design Controls
• Definition: activities which will assure the design adequacy
for the failure cause/mechanism under consideration
• Confidence Current Design Controls will detect cause and
subsequent failure mode prior to production, and/or will
prevent the cause from occurring
– If there are more than one control, rate each and select the lowest for
the detection rating
• Control must be allocated in the plan to be listed, otherwise
it’s a recommended action
• 3 types of Controls
– 1. Prevention from occurring or reduction of rate
– 2. Detect cause mechanism and lead to corrective actions
– 3. Detect the failure mode, leading to corrective actions
Current Design Controls
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLE:
•Engineering specifications (P) – preventive control
•Historical data (P) – preventive control
•Functional testing (D) – detective control
•General vehicle durability (D) – detective control
Examples of Controls
• Type 1 control • Type 2 and 3 controls
– Warnings which alert – Road test
product user to – Design Review
impending failure – Environmental test
– Fail/safe features
– fleet test
– Design
– lab test
procedures/guidelines/
– field test
specifications
– life cycle test
– load test
Detection
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLE:
•Engineering specifications – no detection value
•Historical data – no detection value
•Functional testing – detection 3
•General vehicle durability – detection 5
RPN (Risk Priority Number)
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
•EXAMPLE:
•Cannot see out of front window – severity 9, – incorrect vent
location – 2, Functional testing – detection 3, RPN - 54
Risk Priority Number(RPN)
• Severity x Occurrence x Detection
• RPN is used to prioritize concerns/actions
• The greater the value of the RPN the greater the
concern
• RPN ranges from 1-1000
• The team must make efforts to reduce higher
RPNs through corrective action
• General guideline is over 100 = recommended
action
RPN Considerations
• Rating scale example:
– Severity = 10 indicates that the effect is very
serious and is “worse” than Severity = 1.
– Occurrence = 10 indicates that the likelihood of
occurrence is very high and is “worse” than
Occurrence = 1.
– Detection = 10 indicates that the failure is not
likely to be detected before it reaches the end user
and is “worse” than Detection = 1.
1 5 10
RPN Considerations (continued)
• RPN ratings are relative to a particular
analysis.
– An RPN in one analysis is comparable to other
RPNs in the same analysis …
– … but an RPN may NOT be comparable to
RPNs in another analysis.
1 5 10
RPN Considerations (continued)
• Because similar RPN's can result in several
different ways (and represent different types
of risk), analysts often look at the ratings in
other ways, such as:
– Occurrence/Severity Matrix (Severity and
Occurrence).
– Individual ratings and various ranking tables.
1 5 10
Recommended Actions
• Definition: tasks recommended for the purpose of
reducing any or all of the rankings
• Only design revision can bring about a reduction in
the severity ranking
• Examples of Recommended actions
– Perform:
• Designed experiments
• reliability testing
• finite element analysis
– Revise design
– Revise test plan
– Revise material specification
Recommended Actions
Item C O D Action Results
Potential Current Response &
Potential Potential S l c Design e R
Cause(s)/ Recommended Target S O D R
Failure Effect(s) of e a c Controls t P Action
Mechanism(s) Actions Complete E C E P
Mode Failure v s u e N Taken
Of Failure Date V C T N
s r c
Function Prevent Detect
• Define Scope:
• 1. Resolution - The analysis will be
restricted to the four major subsystems
(electrical system, safety valve, thermostat,
and pressure gage).
• 2. Focus - Safety
Pressure cooker block diagram
Process FMEA
• Definition:
– A documented analysis which begins with a
teams thoughts concerning requirements that
could go wrong and ending with defined
actions which should be implemented to help
prevent and/or detect problems and their
causes.
– A proactive tool to identify concerns with the
sources of variation and then define and take
corrective action.
PFMEA as a tool…
• To access risk or the likelihood of
significant problem
• Trouble shoot problems
• Guide improvement aid in determining
where to spend time and money
• Capture learning to retain and share
knowledge and experience
Customer Requirements
Deign Specifications
Key Product Characteristics
Machine Process Capability
Conforming Product
Reduced Variation
Customer Satisfaction
Inputs for PMEA
• Process flow diagram
• Assembly instructions
• Design FMEA
• Current engineering drawings and specifications
• Data from similar processes
– Scrap
– Rework
– Downtime
– Warranty
Process Function Requirement
• Brief description of the manufacturing
process or operation
• The PFMEA should follow the actual work
process or sequence, same as the process
flow diagram
• Begin with a verb
Team Members for a PFMEA
• Process engineer
• Manufacturing supervisor
• Operators
• Quality
• Safety
• Product engineer
• Customers
• Suppliers
PFMEA Assumptions
• The design is valid
• All incoming product is to design
specifications
• Failures can but will not necessarily occur
• Design failures are not covered in a
PFMEA, they should have been part of the
design FMEA
Potentional Failure Mode
• How the process or product may fail to
meet design or quality requirements
• Many process steps or operations will have
multiple failure modes
• Think about what has gone wrong from past
experience and what could go wrong
Common Failure Modes
• Assembly • Machining
– Missing parts – Too narrow
– Damaged – Too deep
– Orientation – Angle incorrect
– Contamination – Finish not to
– Off location specification
• Torque – Flash or not cleaned
– Loose or over torque
– Missing fastener
– Cross threaded
Potentional failure modes
• Sealant • Drilling holes
– Missing – Missing
– Wrong material – Location
applied – Deep or shallow
– Insufficient or – Over/under size
excessive material – Concentricity
– dry
– angle
Potential effects
• Think of what the customer will experience
– End customer
– Next user-consequences due to failure mode
• May have several effects but list them in
same cell
• The worst case impact should be
documented and rated in severity of effect
Potential Effects
• End user • Next operation
– Noise – Cannot assemble
– Leakage – Cannot tap or bore
– Odor – Cannot connect
– Poor appearance – Cannot fasten
– Endangers safety – Damages equipment
– Loss of a primary – Does not fit
function – Does not match
– performance – Endangers operator
Severity Ranking
• How the effects of a potential failure mode may
impact the customer
• Only applies to the effect and is assigned with
regard to any other rating
Control
Influence
Current or
Customer Process
Expected Process Implementation
Design Flow
quality Changes and verification
requirements Diagram
performance
Recommended
Corrective actions
Process FMEA document i.e.
Error proofing
Operator
Job Communication of standard
Instructions of work to operators
FMEA process flow
10 steps to conduct a FMEA
1. Review the design or process
2. Brainstorm potential failure modes
3. List potential failure effects
4. Assign Severity ratings
5. Assign Occurrence ratings
6. Assign detection rating
7. Calculate RPN
8. Develop an action plan to address high RPN’s
9. Take action
10. Reevaluate the RPN after the actions are completed
Reasons FMEA’s fail
1. One person is assigned to complete the FMEA.
2. Not customizing the rating scales with company specific
data, so they are meaningful to your company
3. The design or process expert is not included in the
FMEA or is allowed to dominate the FMEA team
4. Members of the FMEA team are not trained in the use of
FMEA, and become frustrated with the process
5. FMEA team becomes bogged down with minute details
of design or process, losing sight of the overall objective
Reasons FMEA’s fail
6. Rushing through identifying the failure modes to
move onto the next step of the FMEA
7. Listing the same potential effect for every failure
i.e. customer dissatisfied.
8. Stopping the FMEA process when the RPN’s are
calculated and not continuing with the
recommended actions.
9. Not reevaluating the high RPN’s after the
corrective actions have been completed.
Software Recommendations
• Numerous types and specialized formats
• Many have free trials
– X-FMEA Reliasoft
– FMEA Pro-7
– Access Data bases
– Excel formats