Cost of Unsuitability: Assessment of Trade-offs Between the Cost of Operational Unsuitability and Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E) Costs
Abstract
More than one fourth of all major weapon systems that underwent Operational Test and Evaluation from 1984-2006 were evaluated as unsuitable. A frequent and significant contributing factor in these unsuitable evaluations was substandard reliability. When a system is deemed unsuitable due to substandard reliability, it necessarily incurs additional costs to avoid, fix, or accept the consequences of its unsuitability. We estimate such costs for three aircraft systems (F-22, MV-22, and C-17) that were all subject to substandard reliability, but invested to improve it during different programmatic phases. The F-22 and MV-22 programs attempted to fix substandard reliability after being evaluated as unsuitable at Initial Operational Test and Evaluation (IOT&E). The C-17 attempted to avoid an unsuitable evaluation at IOT&E by investing to improve its substandard reliability during the System Development and Demonstration phase. Our results provide insight into the cost-based trade space for addressing unsuitability issues at different programmatic phases. We found that (1) being unsuitable due to substandard reliability is costly; (2) investments to improve reliability exhibit strong returns; and (3) earlier investment in reliability yields higher returns.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Mar 01, 2008
- Accession Number
- ADA493879
Entities
People
- Christopher S. Wait
- Harold S. Balaban
- Kristen M. Guerrera
- Tzee-nan K. Lo
- Waynard C. Devers
Organizations
- Institute for Defense Analyses