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The house of reliability

M. Braglia (Dipartimento di Ingegneria Meccanica, Nucleare e della Produzione, Università di Pisa, Pisa, Italy)
G. Fantoni (Dipartimento di Ingegneria Meccanica, Nucleare e della Produzione, Università di Pisa, Pisa, Italy)
M. Frosolini (Dipartimento di Ingegneria Meccanica, Nucleare e della Produzione, Università di Pisa, Pisa, Italy)

International Journal of Quality & Reliability Management

ISSN: 0265-671X

Article publication date: 24 April 2007

2752

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to provide a structured methodology for performing build‐in reliability (BIR) investigation during a new product development cycle.

Design/methodology/approach

The methodology in this paper represents an extension of the Quality Functional Deployment/House of Quality (QFD/HoQ) concepts to reliability studies. It is able to translate the reliability requisites of customers into functional requirements for the product in a structured manner based on a Failure Mode And Effect Analysis (FMEA). Besides, it then allows it to build a completely new operative tool, named House of Reliability (HoR), that enhances standard analyses, introducing the most significant correlations among failure modes. Using the results from HoR, a cost‐worth analysis can be easily performed, making it possible to analyse and to evaluate the economical consequences of a failure.

Findings

The paper finds that the application of the proposed approach allows users to identify and control the design requisites affecting reliability. The methodology enhances the reliability analysis introducing and managing the correlations among failure modes, splitting the severity into a detailed series of basic severity aspects, performing also cost/worth assessments.

Practical implications

It is shown that the methodology enables users to finely analyse failure modes by splitting severity according to the product typology and the importance of each Severity criterion according to laws or international standards. Moreover the methodology is able to consider the “domino effects” and so to estimate the impact of the correlation between the causes of failure. Finally a cost/worth analysis evaluates the economical consequences of a failure with respect to the incurred costs to improve the final reliability level of the product.

Originality/value

The paper proposes a completely new approach, robust, structured and useful in practice, for reliability analysis. The methodology, within an integrated approach, overcomes some of the largely known limits of standard FMECA: it takes into account multiple criteria, differently weighted, it analyses the product considering not only the direct consequence of a failure, but also the reaction chain originated by a starting failure.

Keywords

Citation

Braglia, M., Fantoni, G. and Frosolini, M. (2007), "The house of reliability", International Journal of Quality & Reliability Management, Vol. 24 No. 4, pp. 420-440. https://doi.org/10.1108/02656710710740572

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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