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Introduction to Reliability Engineering

1.1 What is Reliability Engineering?

No one disputes the need for engineered products to be reliable. The average consumer is acutely aware of the problem of less than perfect reliability in domestic products such as TV sets and automobiles. Organizations such as airlines, the military and public utilities are aware of the costs of unreliability. Manufacturers often suffer high costs of failure under warranty. Argument and misunderstanding begin when we try to quantify reliability values, or try to assign financial or other cost or benefit values to levels of reliability.

The simplest, purely producer-oriented or inspectors' view of quality is that in which a product is assessed against a specification or set of attributes, and when passed is delivered to the customer. The customer, having accepted the product, accepts that it might fail at some future time. This simple approach is often coupled with a warranty, or the customer may have some protection in law, so that he may claim redress for failures occurring within a stated or reasonable time. However, this approach provides no measure of quality over a period of time, particularly outside a warranty period. Even within a warranty period, the customer usually has no grounds for further action if the product fails once, twice or several times, provided that the manufacturer repairs the product as promised each time. If it fails often, the manufacturer will suffer high warranty costs, ...

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