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Encyclopedia > Service life

A product's service life is its expected lifetime, or the acceptable period of use in service. It is the time that any manufactured item can be expected to be 'serviceable' or supported by its originating manufacturer.


Expected service life consists of business policy, using tools and calculations from maintainability and reliability analysis. Service life is a unique commitment made by the item's manufacturer and is usually specified as a median. Actual service life is the maximal recorded life of a product. This article is about managing the life of a product in the market. ... Reliability engineering is an engineering field, that deals with the study of reliability: the ability of a system or component to perform its required functions under stated conditions for a specified period of time. ...


Service life is different from a predicted life, or MTTF/MTBF (Mean Time to Failure/Mean Time Between Failures)/MFOP(Maintenance-free operating period). Predicted life is useful such that a manufacturer may estimate, by hypothetical modeling and calculation, a general rule for which it will honor warranty claims, or planning for mission fulfillment. The difference between service life and predicted life is most clear when considering mission time and reliability in comparison to MTBF and service life. In engineering and telecommunication, the mean time between failures (MTBF) is the average time a system will operate without a failure. ... In commercial and consumer transactions, a warranty is an obligation that an article or service sold is as factually stated or legally implied by the seller, and that often provides for a specific remedy such as repair or replacement in the event the article or service fails to meet the... In engineering and telecommunication, the mean time between failures (MTBF) is the average time a system will operate without a failure. ...


For example: A missile system can have a mission time of less than one minute, a service life of 20 years, active MTBF of 20 minutes, dormant MTBF of 50 years and a reliability of .999999. For other uses, see Missile (disambiguation). ...


A consumer item will have different expectations about service and longevity[1] based upon factors such as use, cost, and quality. Consumers refers to individuals or households that use goods and services generated within the economy. ...

Contents

Product strategy

Manufacturers will commit to very conservative service life, usually 2 to 5 years for most commercial and consumer products (for example computer peripherals and components). However, for large and expensive 'durable' items (airliner, hydroelectric power plants) the items are not 'consumable', and service lives and maintenance activity will factor large in the service life. Again, an airliner might have a mission time of 11 hours, a predicted active MTBF of 10,000 hours with maintenance (or 15,000 hours without maintenance), a reliability of .99999 and a service life of 40 years. This article is about managing product design and production details. ... This article is about the machine. ... For an account of the words periphery and peripheral as they are used in biology, sociology, politics, computer hardware, and other fields, see the periphery disambiguation page. ... Various components An electronic component is a basic electronic element usually packaged in a discrete form with two or more connecting leads or metallic pads. ... An Airbus A340 airliner operated by Air Jamaica An airliner is a large fixed-wing aircraft with the primary function of transporting paying passengers. ... Undershot water wheels on the Orontes River in Hama, Syria Saint Anthony Falls Hydropower or hydraulic power is the force or energy of moving water. ...


The most common model for item lifetime behavior, in relative failure terms follows a bathtub curve. On the abcissa of this curve is the term 'lambda' or failure rate, which is the inverse of MTBF. The ordinate axis is time. Initially, the bathub shows early life failures, generally not witnessed by the consumer and usually termed as factory defects. The flat middle portion of the bathtub, or 'useful life', is a slightly inclined, exponentially increasing, constant failure rate period where the consumer enjoys the benefit conferred by the item. As the bathtub reaches its far right terminus, it is exponentially increasing, modeling untoward physical effects related to Arrhenius rate effects. Failure rate is the frequency with which an engineered system or component fails, expressed for example in failures per hour. ... In engineering and telecommunication, the mean time between failures (MTBF) is the average time a system will operate without a failure. ... Svante August Arrhenius (February 19, 1859 – October 2, 1927) was a Swedish chemist and one of the founders of the science of physical chemistry. ...


For an individual product, there may be several bathtub curves, related to different aspects of the product. For instance, a tire will have a service life partitioning related to the tread and the casing. A retread, also known as recap, is a manufacturing process designed to extend the useful lifespan of a worn tire. ...


Service life examples

For maintainable items, those wear-out items that are determined by logistical analysis to be provisioned for sparing and replacement will assure a longer service life than manufactured items without such planning. A simple example is automotive tires - failure to plan for this wear out item would limit automotive service life to the extent of a single set of tires. Tires may refer to: the plural of tire the Italian name for Tiers, Italy, a town in South Tyrol, Italy Category: ...


An individual tire's life follows the bathtub curve, to boot. After installation, there is a not-small probability of failure which may be related to material or workmanship or even to the process for mounting the tire which may introduce some small damage. After the initial period, the tire will perform, given no defect introducing event such as encountering a road hazard (a nail or a pothole), for a long duration relative to its expected service life which is a function of several variables (design, material, process). After a period, the failure probability will rise; for some tires, this will occur after the tread is worn out. Then, a secondary market for tires puts a retread on the tire thereby extending the service life. It is not uncommon for an 80,000-mile tire to perform well beyond that limit.[2] In reliability theory, the bathtub curve is the phenomenon that the fraction of products failing in a given timespan is usually high early in the lifecycle, low in the middle, and rising strongly towards the end. ... The city of Los Angeles is famous for its large potholes. ... A retread, also known as recap, is a manufacturing process designed to extend the useful lifespan of a worn tire. ...


It may be difficult to obtain reliable longevity data about many consumer products as, in general, efforts at actuarial analysis are not taken to the same extent as found with that needed to support insurance decisions. However, some attempts to provide this type of information have been made. An example is the collection of estimates for household components provided by the Old House Web[3] which gathers data from the Appliance Statistical Review and various institutes involved with the homebuilding trade. Consumers refers to individuals or households that use goods and services generated within the economy. ... Actuarial science applies mathematical and statistical methods to finance and insurance, particularly to the assessment of risk. ... The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company is one of the largest New York based life insurance companies Insurance, in law and economics, is a form of risk management primarily used to hedge against the risk of a contingent loss. ...


See also

Planned obsolescence (also built-in obsolescence[1] in the United Kingdom) is the process of a product becoming obsolete and/or non-functional after a certain period or amount of use in a way that is planned or designed by the manufacturer. ...

References

  1. ^ "Drive it forever" Club Lexus Forums
  2. ^ Tire Retread Information Bureau
  3. ^ Old House Web, "Life Expectancy of Household Components

  Results from FactBites:
 
Service Group - About Us (345 words)
Service Life provides a full line of specialty products and services to over 350 automotive dealerships throughout Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, and Louisiana, producing over $375 million in assets and over $9 billion of insurance in force.
Service Group's insurance operations, comprised of Service Life and Service Lloyds, stand at the forefront of the industry, offering the most comprehensive programs and innovative solutions available to our clients.
Service Group's field staff is made up of over 50 highly trained and experienced personnel, who roll up their sleeves every day to deliver on our promise to our clients.
School Life - Community Service (398 words)
Students must be current with their service hours or they will receive a failing grade on their grade report at the end of the 2nd or 4th term.
Service forms must be submitted to the Campus Minister two weeks before the second and fourth term exams.
Any service work that does not fall into one of the above three categories or hours above and beyond the required hours in any category is considered "other" service hours.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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