Elevating Reliability Engineering Decision-Making Through Disciplined Diagnosis, the Right Tools, Proportionate Method Selection, and Organizational Readiness
Reliability engineering offers no shortage of tools. The discipline has accumulated, across roughly a century of formal practice, an arsenal that includes Weibull life-data analysis, fault tree analysis, FMEA and FMECA, root cause analysis, control charts, modal analysis, design of experiments, accelerated life testing, condition monitoring, reliability-centred maintenance, and dozens of variants. The persistent failure mode in the field is not a shortage of tools but a mismatch between the tool and the problem: an over-engineered analysis applied to a question a five-minute hypothesis test would have settled, or a sophisticated technique deployed in an organisation that has not yet developed the foundational disciplines required to absorb its output.
