ANSI ASTM E2782-2017 Standard Guide for Measurement Systems Analysis (MSA).pdf
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1、Designation: E2782 17 An American National StandardStandard Guide forMeasurement Systems Analysis (MSA)1This standard is issued under the fixed designation E2782; the number immediately following the designation indicates the year oforiginal adoption or, in the case of revision, the year of last rev
2、ision. A number in parentheses indicates the year of last reapproval. Asuperscript epsilon () indicates an editorial change since the last revision or reapproval.1. Scope1.1 This guide presents terminology, concepts, and selectedmethods and formulas useful for measurement systems analy-sis (MSA). Me
3、asurement systems analysis may be broadlydescribed as a body of theory and methodology that applies tothe non-destructive measurement of the physical properties ofmanufactured objects.1.2 UnitsThe system of units for this guide is not speci-fied. Dimensional quantities in the guide are presented onl
4、y asillustrations of calculation methods and are not binding onproducts or test methods treated.1.3 This standard does not purport to address all of thesafety concerns, if any, associated with its use. It is theresponsibility of the user of this standard to establish appro-priate safety and health p
5、ractices and determine the applica-bility of regulatory limitations prior to use.1.4 This international standard was developed in accor-dance with internationally recognized principles on standard-ization established in the Decision on Principles for theDevelopment of International Standards, Guides
6、 and Recom-mendations issued by the World Trade Organization TechnicalBarriers to Trade (TBT) Committee.2. Referenced Documents2.1 ASTM Standards:2E177 Practice for Use of the Terms Precision and Bias inASTM Test MethodsE456 Terminology Relating to Quality and StatisticsE2586 Practice for Calculatin
7、g and Using Basic StatisticsE2587 Practice for Use of Control Charts in StatisticalProcess Control3. Terminology3.1 Definitions:3.1.1 Unless otherwise noted, terms relating to quality andstatistics are defined in Terminology E456.3.1.2 accepted reference value, na value that serves as anagreed-upon
8、reference for comparison, and which is derivedas: (1) a theoretical or established value, based on scientificprinciples, (2) an assigned or certified value, based on experi-mental work of some national or international organization, or(3) a consensus or certified value, based on collaborativeexperim
9、ental work under the auspices of a scientific orengineering group. E1773.1.3 calibration, nprocess of establishing a relationshipbetween a measurement device and a known standard value(s).3.1.4 gage, ndevice used as part of the measurementprocess to obtain a measurement result.3.1.5 measurement proc
10、ess, nprocess used to assign anumber to a property of an object or other physical entity.3.1.5.1 DiscussionThe term “measurement system” issometimes used in place of measurement process. (See 3.1.7.)3.1.6 measurement result, nnumber assigned to a propertyof an object or other physical entity being m
11、easured.3.1.6.1 DiscussionThe word “measurement” is used in thesame sense as measurement result.3.1.7 measurement system, nthe collection of hardware,software, procedures and methods, human effort, environmen-tal conditions, associated devices, and the objects that aremeasured for the purpose of pro
12、ducing a measurement.3.1.8 measurement systems analysis (MSA), nany of anumber of specialized methods useful for studying a measure-ment system and its properties.3.2 Definitions of Terms Specific to This Standard:3.2.1 appraiser, nthe person who uses a gage or measure-ment system.3.2.2 discriminati
13、on ratio, nstatistical ratio calculatedfrom the statistics from a gage R control chart methodologies are as described in PracticeE2587.5. Characteristics of a Measurement System (Process)5.1 Measurement has been defined as “the assignment ofnumbers to material objects to represent the relations exis
14、tingamong them with respect to particular properties. The numberassigned to some particular property serves to represent therelative amount of this property associated with the objectconcerned.” (1)35.2 A measurement system may be described as a collectionof hardware, software, procedures and method
15、s, human effort,environmental conditions, associated devices, and the objectsthat are measured for the purpose of producing a measurement.In the practical working of the measurement system, thesefactors combine to cause variation among measurements of thesame object that would not be present if the
16、system wereperfect. A measurement system can have varying degrees ofeach of these factors, and in some cases, one or more factorsmay be the dominant contributor to this variation.5.2.1 A measurement system is like a manufacturing pro-cess for which the product is a supply of numbers calledmeasuremen
17、t results. The measurement system uses inputfactors and a sequence of steps to produce a result. The inputsare just varying degrees of the several factors described in 5.2including the objects being measured. The sequence of processsteps are that which would be described in a method orprocedure for
18、producing the measurement. Taken as a whole,the various factors and the process steps work collectively toform the measurement system/process.5.3 An important consideration in analyzing any measure-ment process is its interaction with time. This gives rise to theproperties of stability and consisten
19、cy. A system that is stableand consistent is one that is predictable, within limits, over aperiod of time. Such a system has properties that do notdeteriorate with time (at least within some set time period) andis said to be in a state of statistical control. Statistical control,stability and consis
20、tency, and predictability have the same3The boldface numbers in parentheses refer to the list of references at the end ofthis standard.E2782 172meaning in this sense. Measurement system instability andinconsistency will cause further added overall variation over aperiod of time.5.3.1 In general, ins
21、tability is a common problem in mea-surement systems. Mechanical and electrical components maywear or degrade with time, human effort may exhibit increas-ing fatigue with time, software and procedures may changewith time, environmental variables will vary with time, and soforth. Thus, measurement sy
22、stem stability is of primary con-cern in any ongoing measurement effort.5.4 There are several basic properties of measurementsystems that are widely recognized among practitioners. Theseare repeatability, reproducibility, linearity, bias, stability,consistency, and resolution. In studying one or mor
23、e of theseproperties, the final result of any such study is some assessmentof the capability of the measurement system with respect to theproperty under investigation. Capability may be cast in severalways, and this may also be application dependent. One of theprimary objectives in any MSA effort is
24、 to assess variationattributable to the various factors of the system.All of the basicproperties assess variation in some form.5.4.1 Repeatability is the variation that results when a singleobject is repeatedly measured in the same way, by the sameappraiser, under the same conditions (see Fig. 1). T
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