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You are here: Home / Articles / FMEA Q and A – Redundant FMEA Recommendations

by Carl S. Carlson Leave a Comment

FMEA Q and A – Redundant FMEA Recommendations

FMEA Q and A – Redundant FMEA Recommendations

FMEA Q and A

What if an FMEA recommended action is redundant with the Design Controls? A reader makes this observation about an earlier article, and asks the question about the value of redundancy in FMEA.

“It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question.”
Eugene Ionesco

Reader’s Question

Thank you for giving back to the Reliability community and helping to progress Reliability training. I purchased a personal copy of “Effective FMEAs: Achieving Safe, Reliable, and Economic Products and Processes Using Failure Mode and Effects Analysis” and it resides on my desk as a handy reference.

I read one of your articles regarding FMEA Recommended Actions.  After taking the quiz, I had a question about the advanced problem.  Is the action “Review results of function test . . . ”  redundant with the detection control?  In other words, is the recommended action double dipping on the detection control?

The problem being referred to by this reader is copied below:

The following is an excerpt from a power steering pump FMEA.

Consider the recommended action “Review results of function test to confirm successful pressure and flow rates achieved.” Is this a good action to address the risk? Is it sufficient? What comments or critiques do you have?

Answer to Reader’s Question

You make a very good observation.  By definition, controls are the methods that are already in place or currently planned. Therefore, the bench test identified in the controls will happen with or without the recommended action. The action is merely to review the results. And as you point out, it is redundant. It does not add value to the power steering pump design.

Some companies have used the action column of the Design FMEA to verify the results of testing. That is redundant, in my opinion, and does not support the important role of Design FMEA, which is to improve the product design, and secondarily to improve the effectiveness of testing.

Next Article

Some FMEA teams associate occurrence ranking with Failure Mode; others associate it with Effect. Still others associate it with Cause? Which is correct? The next article discusses occurrence risk, including examples, and answers this question.

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Filed Under: Articles, Inside FMEA, on Tools & Techniques

About Carl S. Carlson

Carl S. Carlson is a consultant and instructor in the areas of FMEA, reliability program planning and other reliability engineering disciplines, supporting over one hundred clients from a wide cross-section of industries. He has 35 years of experience in reliability testing, engineering, and management positions, including senior consultant with ReliaSoft Corporation, and senior manager for the Advanced Reliability Group at General Motors.

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Articles by Carl Carlson
in the Inside FMEA series

[popup type="" link_text="Logo Info" ]

Information about FMEA Icon

Inside FMEA can be visually represented by a large tree, with roots, a solid trunk, branches, and leaves.

- The roots of the tree represent the philosophy and guiding principles for effective FMEAs.
- The solid trunk of the tree represents the fundamentals for all FMEAs.
- The branches represent the various FMEA applications.
- The leaves represent the valuable outcomes of FMEAs.
- This is intended to convey that each of the various FMEA applications have the same fundamentals and philosophical roots.

 

For example, the roots of the tree can represent following philosophy and guiding principles for effective FMEAs, such as:

1. Correct procedure         2. Lessons learned
3. Trained team                 4. Focus on prevention
5. Integrated with DFR    6. Skilled facilitation
7. Management support

The tree trunk represents the fundamentals of FMEA. All types of FMEA share common fundamentals, and these are essential to successful FMEA applications.

The tree branches can include the different types of FMEAs, including:

1. System FMEA         2. Design FMEA
3. Process FMEA        4. DRBFM
5. Hazard Analysis     6. RCM or Maintenance FMEA
7. Software FMEA      8. Other types of FMEA

The leaves of the tree branches represent individual FMEA projects, with a wide variety of FMEA scopes and results. [/popup]

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