ARMY DOD-HDBK-791-1988 MAINTAINABILITY DESIGN TECHNIQUES METRIC《维修性设计技术的度量》.pdf
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1、DOD-HDBK-771 HI m 9777770 0057778 5 m DOD-HDBK-79 1 (AM) 17 YARCH 1988 MILITARY HANDBOOK MAINTAINABILITY DESIGN TECHNIQUES METRIC NO DELIVERABLE DATA REQUIRED BY THIS DOCUMENT AREA MISC DISTKIBUTION STATEMENT A. APPROVED FOR PUBLIC KELEASE; DISTRIBUTION IS UNLIMITED. Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo
2、reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-DOD-HDBK-771 NI m 7977770 0057977 7 m DOD-HDBK-791 (AM) DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE WASHINGTON, DC 20301 Maintainability Design Techniques 1. This standardization handbook was developed by the School of Engineering and to document the requi
3、rement in the Decision Coordinating Paper (DCP) and System Concept Paper (SCP). Maintainability is a risk area not because the require- ments are not technically available; rather, it is a risk area because of the reluctance of the technical community to change from its traditional emphasis on perfo
4、rmance as opposed to maintainability. In summary, maintainability has emerged as an impor- a . a tant factor af the design process and an inherent design characteristic that is truly quantitative in nature and, therefore, lends itself to specification, demonstration, and trade-off analysis with such
5、 characteristics as reliability and logistic support. The implementation of this philos- ophy seeks the goals and objectives presented in par. 1-4.1. For the maintainability engineer this means that the optimum degree of maintainability must be incorporated in system design, beginning as early as th
6、e concept phase. Ifthe maintainability engineer, workingwith the designer, fails to accomplish this, he fails to achieve his objective- i.e., the provision of operational availability. A system that fails to perform at times cannot safely be planned, which renders it useless for combat operations. 1
7、-2 MAINTAINABILITY VS MAINTENANCE Maintainability is a characteristic of design and instal- lation. This characteristic is the measure of the ability of an item to be retained in or restored to a specified condi- tion when maintenance is performed by personnel having specified skill levels and using
8、 prescribed procedures and resources at each prescribed level of repair (Ref. i). Maintenance is essentially the response to the main- tainability program, Le., the series of actions necessary for retaining materiel in or restoring it to a serviceable condition. Maintenance actions are of two types,
9、 i.e., 1. Corrective Maintenance. An action required when equipment fails or malfunctions 2. Preventive Maintenance. An action required to maintain equipment in an operable condition through periodic servicing and/ or replacement of components at specified intervals. Preventive maintenance can, and
10、shouId, be conveniently scheduled to avoid interference with operating schedules. A detailed discussion of preven- tive maintenance is presented in Chapter S. Erroneously, corrective maintenance is referred to as , unscheduled maintenance, and preventive maintenance is referred to as scheduled maint
11、enance. From a practical standpoint military personnel perform maintenance- both corrective and preventive-whenever a window of opportunity exists. The specific maintenance tasks are a function of the reliability, availabilitv. maintainability, 1- I - - Provided by IHSNot for ResaleNo reproduction o
12、r networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,- DOD-HDBK-773 NI m 7777970 0058035 T m DOD-HDBK-791 (AM) and durability (RAM-D) of the equipment and the opera- tional environment, The calendar time, Le., when the maintenance action was performed, makes that action scheduled or unscheduled. The u
13、nscheduled interruption of a planned operation is always undesirable and usually costly; in the extreme case it could be catastrophic. Although unreliability is usually the primary case of failure and thus governs the frequency with which maintenance actions are neoessary, the ease of maintenance an
14、d the skill of maintenance personnel gov- ern the duration of the action. The easier it is to maintain an item of equipment, the fewer will be the demands on both the skill and number of personnel and, in general, the greater the reduction of equipment downtime. Accord- ingly, since the time require
15、d for maintenance actions is a function of the maintainability characteristics of the equipment, effectiveness of built-in testing and physical design features that affect the speed and ease with which maintenance can be performed should be addressed. Design features are discussed in par. 2-5. In ad
16、dition to physical design features, personnel and human factor considerations are of prime importance. These considerations include the experience of the techni- cian, training required, skill level, supervision required, supervision available, techniques used, physical coordi- nation and strength a
17、nd number of technicians, and teamwork requirements. Personnel and human factors are emphasized because the Army-as well as the other Services-is imposing a strength cap on the number of military personnel and restricting the availability of funds for development and training, and procurement of tra
18、in- ing aids. Additionally, the scenario under which the new Army counters threats requires the deployment of light infantry. Thus the impact on engineering design must be that of ease of maintenance, adequate manlmachine interface, minimal maintenance, and maximum surviv- ability. In no single area
19、 of weapon engineering are the potential rewards as great as those which could be achieved by simplifying the human functions needed to maintain the weapon system. This brief introduction highlights the distinction between maintainability and maintenance. In summary, maintainability is a design char
20、acteristic that makes pos- sible the accomplishment of operational objectives with minimal expenditure of support effort and resources and is a prime responsibility of the maintainability engineer working in cooperation with the designer; maintenance is the actions necessary for retaining materiel i
21、n or restoring it to a serviceable condition. 1-3 MEASURES OF MAINTAINABILITY 1-3.1 GENERAL In par. 1-1 it was pointed out that the maintainability characteristic had to be expressed quantitatively to be meaningful. This characteristic is expressed as the proba- 1-2 bility that an item will be retai
22、ned in, or restored to, a specified condition within a given time period if pre- scribed procedures and resources are followed. There are several measurable parameters that can be used to quan- tify the maintainability characteristic, ease of mainte- nance. Ease of maintenance characterizes the main
23、tain- ability designed into an equipment and can be measured by the elapsed time in which the maintenance can be performed. Thus the maintenance time required to cor- rect equipment performance deviations, such as failure or degradation, is a good measure of how well the equipment has been designed
24、for maintainability. When maintenance time as a design parameter is mea- sured, active time only should be considered, The empha- sis is on the word “active” since there are administrative and logistic delays-e,g., absence of proper instructions and waitingfor a repair part-that bear no relationship
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