Liked and subscribed cause the video was very practical, even though I am a PhD student in Industrial engineering, I struggle with some of these concepts. Its been a while since I last used the weibull distribution, and this video was a very good reminder of such concepts.... And now I will head the "boring pages" and the heavy calculations.... Ps: Your effort in making a boring topic becoming less boring made me laugh. Thanks mate
Predicted number of the population that is expected to fail at that point in the test. However, I do not recommend using this value and stick with the MTTF at the given R&C values. The sample size is too small to expect this trend to be consistent for your entire population.
Hi Mukael, If you need further help that what was discussed in this video for your particular product, feel free to reach out to me in what of the links in the description to find out how I can help.
Hi Amine, It was found using a binomial equation for R&C. I arbitrarily selected a allowable failures of 1 and did an extremely rough round up from a reliability of 47% to 50% with a confidence of 95%. If you would like to get a more detailed explanation on reliability and confidence, check out my video on sample size determination: th-cam.com/video/7egZ0sVEM5o/w-d-xo.html Happy New year!
very useful and very well explained. the begging for likes and subs was a real turn off though. not sure if i can stomach watching any more videos with that needless groveling.
Hi Guia, I will need more specifics. If you would like to find out how I can help. Feel free to reach out to me in one of the links in the description.
All depends on your system, industry, and application. For most consumer products, I would recommend using the tools learned in this video to show how proper sample size selection is important in making any kind of meaningful and useful reliability predictions. Feel free to reach out to me at one of the links above if you would like to talk further and see how I can help.
Liked and subscribed cause the video was very practical, even though I am a PhD student in Industrial engineering, I struggle with some of these concepts. Its been a while since I last used the weibull distribution, and this video was a very good reminder of such concepts.... And now I will head the "boring pages" and the heavy calculations....
Ps: Your effort in making a boring topic becoming less boring made me laugh. Thanks mate
Hi Useche,
Thank you for the kind words and I am glad you found this video helpful.
Cheers!
I never understood Weibull until watching this video. Thank you!
You are welcome! Thank you for the feedback.
Always knew about how to find MTTF, but this helped me understand how to statistically back my results using wiebull analysis.
great video.....simply explained
thanks
what exactly is the differnece between the MTTF and the time value that results of the curve colliding with 63,2 %?
Predicted number of the population that is expected to fail at that point in the test. However, I do not recommend using this value and stick with the MTTF at the given R&C values. The sample size is too small to expect this trend to be consistent for your entire population.
How do I use this for warranty predictions
Hi Mukael, If you need further help that what was discussed in this video for your particular product, feel free to reach out to me in what of the links in the description to find out how I can help.
Could you explain where the 95% level come from please 6:14 , Thank you for the video!
Hi Amine,
It was found using a binomial equation for R&C. I arbitrarily selected a allowable failures of 1 and did an extremely rough round up from a reliability of 47% to 50% with a confidence of 95%.
If you would like to get a more detailed explanation on reliability and confidence, check out my video on sample size determination:
th-cam.com/video/7egZ0sVEM5o/w-d-xo.html
Happy New year!
very useful and very well explained. the begging for likes and subs was a real turn off though. not sure if i can stomach watching any more videos with that needless groveling.
How can I use this for my customer data?
Google.
Hi Guia, I will need more specifics. If you would like to find out how I can help. Feel free to reach out to me in one of the links in the description.
how can i use this to convince my company that 1 test sample is not enough?
All depends on your system, industry, and application. For most consumer products, I would recommend using the tools learned in this video to show how proper sample size selection is important in making any kind of meaningful and useful reliability predictions. Feel free to reach out to me at one of the links above if you would like to talk further and see how I can help.
Nice presentation, however, you di not explain how you calculated the confidence ratio!
How to specify the sample size
This can be done using either a non parametric or parametric binomial equation.
How do I use this for warranty predictions