Description / Abstract:
The terms used in most engineering technologies tend to be physical
characteristics such as speed,
rate of turn, and fuel consumption. While they may require very
careful definition and control of
the way in which they are measured, the terms themselves are not
subject to different
interpretations. Reliability, Maintainability, and Supportability
(RMS) however, use terms that are
defined in a variety of ways with multiple interpretations.
The variety of definitions given to a single term creates problems
when trying to compare the
performance of one system to another. To eliminate the confusion, a
literature search that listed
current and past RMS terms and definitions was conducted. The
literature search included input from
the US Military, UK Military, NATO, SAE, IEEE, NASA, ISO, University
Research, and other
publications. The object was to determine the common definition of
Reliability Terms from a variety
of sources. It is accepted that some of the definitions may be unique
because of the nature of the
mission, but it is the strong conviction of the Government and
Industry practitioners who make up
the SAE Reliability Committee under the G-11 Division that there
should be some fundamental
definitions used for all hardware systems.
Accordingly, in October of 2003 the task of developing and revising
the current SAE AIR4896
publication issued in 1995 of Recommended RMS Terms and Parameters. It
is understood by individuals
that participated in this project that future editions will update
terminology as developments are
made within the RMS community. Due to the complexity and nature of
Software Reliability, we have
specifically excluded "software reliability" terms from this edition.
Future updates of this
document will continue to reflect the converging of defense and
commercial technology and
standards.