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SAE ARP5638

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

RMS Terms and Definitions

Published date

06-03-2005

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1 SCOPE
2 REFERENCES
  2.1 SAE Publications
  2.2 Department of Defense Publications
  2.3 Ministry of Defense Publications
  2.4 NATO Publications
  2.5 ISO Publications
  2.6 Government Organizations
  2.7 Reliability and Maintainability Symposium (RAMS)
  2.8 American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)
  2.9 Publications
3 APPROACH
  3.1 Discussion of Data Base Generation
  3.2 Selection/Recommendation Process
      3.2.1 Selection of Terms Applicable to RMS
      3.2.2 Selection of Recommended Terms
      3.2.3 Selection of Preferred Definitions
      3.2.4 Consensus Process

The terms used in most engineering technologies tend to be physical characteristics such as speed, rate of turn, and fuel consumption.

DocumentType
Standard
PublisherName
SAE International
Status
Current

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.

ARMP-7 : 2008 NATO R&M TERMINOLOGY APPLICABLE TO ARMPS
MIL STD 1843 : 0 RELIABILITY-CENTERED MAINTENANCE FOR AIRCRAFT, ENGINES AND EQUIPMENT
AIAA R 013 : 1992 RECOMMENDED PRACTICE FOR SOFTWARE RELIABILITY
MIL-HDBK-338 Revision B:1998 ELECTRONIC RELIABILITY DESIGN HANDBOOK
MIL-STD-1388-1 Revision A:1983 LOGISTIC SUPPORT ANALYSIS
MIL-E-5007 Revision D:1973 ENGINE, AIRCRAFT, TURBOJET AND TURBOFAN, GENERAL SPECIFICATION FOR
ISO/IEC 12207:2008 Systems and software engineering — Software life cycle processes
MIL-STD-471 Revision A:1973 MAINTAINABILITY DEMONSTRATION
MIL-STD-1472 Revision G:2012 HUMAN ENGINEERING
MIL-STD-721 Revision C:1981 DEFINITIONS OF EFFECTIVENESS TERMS FOR RELIABILITY MAINTAINABILITY, HUMAN FACTORS, AND SAFETY
MIL-STD-785 Revision B:1980 RELIABILITY PROGRAM FOR SYSTEMS AND EQUIPMENT DEVELOPMENT AND PRODUCTION
MIL-STD-1309 Revision D:1992 DEFINITIONS OF TERMS FOR TEST, MEASUREMENT AND DIAGNOSTIC EQUIPMENT

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