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Every parent is concerned when a child is slow to become a mature adult. This is also true for any product designer, regardless of their industry sector. For a product to be mature, it must have an expected level of reliability from the moment it is put into service, and must maintain this level throughout its industrial use.

While there have been theoretical and practical advances in reliability from the 1960s to the end of the 1990s, to take into account the effect of maintenance, the maturity of a product is often only partially addressed.

Product Maturity 1 fills this gap as much as possible; a difficult exercise given that maturity is a transverse activity in the engineering sciences; it must be present throughout the lifecycle of a product.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Foreword by Laurent Denis
  5. Foreword by Serge Zaninotti
  6. Acknowledgements
  7. Introduction
  8. 1 Reliability Review
  9. 2 Maturity
  10. 3 Derating Analysis
  11. 4 Components with Limited Service Life
  12. 5 Analysis of Product Performances
  13. 6 Aggravated Tests
  14. 7 Burn-In Test
  15. 8 Run-In
  16. List of Notations
  17. List of Definitions
  18. List of Acronyms
  19. References
  20. Index
  21. End User License Agreement
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