Reliability engineering is the sub-discipline of systems engineering that emphasizes the ability of equipment to function, without failure, for a specified period of time under stated conditions. This estimator provides core metrics used by maintenance professionals to quantify system performance and plan lifecycle interventions.

MTBF vs MTTR

MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) measures reliability. It is the average time a system operates before a failure occurs.MTTR (Mean Time To Repair) measures maintainability. It is the average time required to repair a failed system and return it to service.

The Availability Math

System Availability is the probability that a system is "up" and able to perform its function at any given time. It is a function of both reliability and maintainability:A = MTBF / (MTBF + MTTR)

Interactive Estimator

Enter your operational data below to calculate mission-critical reliability metrics. The generated chart visualizes the probability of failure-free operation over the selected time horizon.

System Parameters

MTBF is calculated as Time / Failures. Availability includes MTTR impact.

MTBF
4,380
Hours Between Failures
MTTR
24
Mean Time To Repair (Hrs)
Failure Rate
2.2831e-4
Failures per Hour (λ)
Availability
99.4550%
Steady-State Uptime

Reliability Function $R(t)$

Probability of maintaining mission-ready state over time.

Formula: $R(t) = e^{-\lambda t}$

Availability Benchmarks

  • Three Nines (99.9%)8.77 hrs/year
  • Four Nines (99.99%)52.6 mins/year
  • Five Nines (99.999%)5.26 mins/year

Engineering Notes

MTBF assumes a constant failure rate (Exponential Distribution), which is typical for the "useful life" section of the Bathtub Curve. For wearable components, use Weibull analysis.

Technical Standards & References

REF [MIL-HDBK-217F]
US Department of Defense (1991)
Reliability Prediction of Electronic Equipment
The foundational military handbook for determining MTBF based on component stress and environmental factors.
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REF [Telcordia-SR332]
Telcordia Technologies (2011)
Reliability Prediction Procedure for Electronic Equipment
The commercial standard for telecommunications reliability, emphasizing operating history data.
REF [IEC-61709]
International Electrotechnical Commission (2017)
Electric components - Reliability - Reference conditions for failure rates
International standards for converting laboratory failure rates to field-ready MTBF metrics.
Mathematical models derived from standard engineering protocols. Not for human safety critical systems without redundant validation.

Theoretical Background

The Failure Rate ($\lambda$)

In reliability engineering, the failure rate is the frequency with which an engineered system or component fails, expressed, for example, in failures per hour. It is conceptually the inverse of MTBF:

$\lambda = \frac{1}{MTBF}$

Reliability Function $R(t)$

The Reliability Function $R(t)$, also known as the survival function, represents the probability that a system will succeed (not fail) through time $t$. Under the assumption of a constant failure rate (the "flat" portion of the bathtub curve), it is expressed as:

$R(t) = e^{-\lambda t}$

Where:

  • $e$ is Euler's number ($\approx 2.71828$)
  • $\lambda$ is the failure rate
  • $t$ is the operating time for which reliability is being estimated

The Bathtub Curve Insight

While the constant failure rate model is widely used, real-world systems often transition through three stages: **Infant Mortality** (high early failure), **Useful Life** (constant random failure), and **Wear-out Phase** (increasing failure rate due to degradation). This tool is optimized for the **Useful Life** region.

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Technical Standards & References

REF [1]
Department of Defense
MIL-HDBK-217F, 'Reliability Prediction of Electronic Equipment'
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REF [2]
IEEE
IEEE 493-2007 (Gold Book) - Design of Reliable Industrial and Commercial Power Systems
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REF [3]
ISO
ISO 14224:2016 - Reliability and maintenance data for equipment
VIEW OFFICIAL SOURCE
Mathematical models derived from standard engineering protocols. Not for human safety critical systems without redundant validation.

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