4.55 out of 5
4.55
796 reviews on Udemy

An Introduction to Reliability Engineering

A Study of Why Things Fail and How to Measure and Improve their Useful Life
Instructor:
Ray Harkins
2,624 students enrolled
English [Auto]
What is Reliability and How is it Measured
Why Things Fail
The Fundamentals of Strength-Stress Analysis
The Basics of the Normal and Exponential Distributions
Z-Score and how it's used in Strength-Stress Analysis
Introductions to Life Testing, Accelerated Life Testing (ALT), Highly Accelerated Life Testing (HALT), and Highly Accelerated Stress Screening (HASS)
The "Bathtub" or Weibull Curve
Reliability Block Diagrams
Redundancy, Preventive/Predictive Maintenance, and Derating and Methods for Improving Reliability
How Reliability Engineering is a key component in the product design and manufacturing processes
And much more!!

Reliability is often referred to as “quality over time”. And this idea of reliability that was birthed in the early days of electronics and aviation, now extends into every sector of consumer and industrial products. Automobiles, airplane, televisions and computers have all found their way into the hands of everyday consumers because of the advancement in reliability engineering.

In “An Introduction to Reliability Engineering”, we present an overview of the major concepts in the field of study including:

– The single reason of why things fail

– Strength / load analysis

– Statistical analysis using the Normal and Exponential distributions

– Accelerated Life Testing (ALT)

– Reliability block diagrams

– Assessing the reliability of systems

– Reliability improvement

– Highly Accelerated Life Testing (HALT) and Highly Accelerated Stress Screening (HASS)

– Preventive and predictive maintenance

– And MUCH MORE!!!

This class is designed for the quality, manufacturing or engineering professionals looking to expand their skill set into this important field of study. “An Introduction to Reliability Engineering” will give you a foundational understanding of these key ideas and prepare you for more advanced training.

While an advanced understanding of statistics is required to become a reliability engineer, only a basic understanding of manufacturing, mathematics and Microsoft Excel is required to get started in this class.

Sign up today to begin your journey into the field of reliability engineering!!

“This course was absolutely fantastic. The instructor is very engaging and knowledgeable of the topic … I had such a great time taking this course that I plan on enrolling in more of Ray Harkins’s classes. The video included in the “Bonus Section” has pointed me towards many great suggestions for that next class. Thank you very much Ray, and God bless!” – Gary E.

“Lots of important, interesting and fundamental information. Really enjoying it and learning lots.” – Matthew O.

Share it with friends
You can view and review the lecture materials indefinitely, like an on-demand channel.
Definitely! If you have an internet connection, courses on Udemy are available on any device at any time. If you don't have an internet connection, some instructors also let their students download course lectures. That's up to the instructor though, so make sure you get on their good side!
4.6
4.6 out of 5
796 Ratings

Detailed Rating

Stars 5
394
Stars 4
313
Stars 3
77
Stars 2
10
Stars 1
1
fb7d906751690454f36d49b42ff59ab9
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee

Includes

5 hours on-demand video
Full lifetime access
Access on mobile and TV
Certificate of Completion

Featured Ad

You might like

You might like

An Introduction to Reliability Engineering
Price:
$49.99 $35