Development of Maintenance METRICS to Forecast Resource Demands of Weapon Systems
Abstract
This report describes the methodology and results of a 32 month effort to 'Develop Maintenance Metrics To Forecast Resource Demands of Weapon Systems.' Increased concern with the rising cost to support weapon systems currently in operation, as well as those in development, has created the need for more accurate methods of projecting maintenance requirements. The objective of this subject research was to alleviate the above need by identifying, determining, and integrating those measurable weapon system parameters which are necessary and sufficient to predict and quantify the drivers of maintenance resource demands. Phase I investigated and developed new maintenance metrics for aircraft propulsion and avionics. Phase I results were then reviewed for overall success and applicability before proceeding with Phase II efforts. Initial results were acceptable so Phase II of the study was initiated to develop metrics for the rest of the subsystems commonly included in Air Force aircraft. This document is the final report of a series of five technical reports published during the study. It is intended to be a summary overview of the study project and an application guide for potential users of the developed metrics methodology. Study findings include: (1) Review of published literature; (2) Critical equipment selection; (3) Maintenance impact parameter identification; (4) Data base assembly and integration; (5) Maintenance impact estimating relationship detection and analysis; (6) Maintenance metric model development; and (7) Maintenance metrics validation.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Oct 01, 1980
- Accession Number
- ADA104089
Entities
People
- David H. Wilson
- Donald K. Hindes
- Frank Maher
- Gary A. Walker
Organizations
- Boeing