cdaringe
Industrial
- Feb 27, 2012
- 2
Hi all:
I'm in search of the correct statistical technique to set the number of cycles I need to push my product through during test.
Historically these values have been arbitrarily set. Currently, I cycle it 500 times per test, which extends a full shift. That's a lot of NVA cycle time i'd like to cut back on.
I have failure data/unit--at what cycles failures occurred and had to be corrected.
I want to develop a model for gauging the # of cycles to catch X% of failures, likely with an alpha of 1-2%.
Many unit pass through fail-free, others with multiple failures/unit. Not sure what method to pursue! Would appreciate some tips!
Thanks,
-Chris
I'm in search of the correct statistical technique to set the number of cycles I need to push my product through during test.
Historically these values have been arbitrarily set. Currently, I cycle it 500 times per test, which extends a full shift. That's a lot of NVA cycle time i'd like to cut back on.
I have failure data/unit--at what cycles failures occurred and had to be corrected.
I want to develop a model for gauging the # of cycles to catch X% of failures, likely with an alpha of 1-2%.
Many unit pass through fail-free, others with multiple failures/unit. Not sure what method to pursue! Would appreciate some tips!
Thanks,
-Chris