Ac 20-157
Ac 20-157
Ac 20-157
Department
Advisory
of Transportation
Federal Aviation
Circular
Administration
a. This advisory circular (AC) shows you how to develop and use a reliability assessment
plan. An assessment plan documents the controlled, repeatable processes for assessing the
reliability of aircraft and engine electronic and electrical systems, including their
electromechanical elements and equipment.
• Type certificate (Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulation (14 CFR)) part 21,
Subparts B and F,
• Amended supplemental type certificate (14 CFR part 21, Subpart D),
• Technical standard order authorization (14 CFR part 21, Subpart O), or
c. This AC is not mandatory and does not constitute a regulation. However, if you use the
means described herein, you should follow it in all important respects. This AC describes an
acceptable means, though it is not the only means, for manufacturers to use reliability assessment
plans to assess the reliability of aircraft and engine electronic and electrical systems, including
their electromechanical elements and equipment. This AC doesn’t apply to other systems and
equipment, such as mechanical or fluid systems. Those systems and equipment may involve
very different approaches to reliability.
1/19/07 AC 20-157
a. A plan is used to assess the reliability of aircraft and engine electronic and electrical
systems, including their electromechanical elements, and equipment during their design and
operational life. You can use the results of a plan as a part of the following:
• Certification analyses,
(1) It encourages you, as an equipment manufacturer and plan owner, to consider all
relevant information regarding equipment reliability (including the effects of design,
manufacturing process, and component selection). This is different from more traditional
methods that focus on component reliability as the most significant contributor to equipment
reliability.
(2) A plan encourages you to define and use the processes most effective for your
equipment.
(4) A plan may define the range of equipment designed or manufactured by the plan
owner and the plan applicability date, to which the plan applies. A plan allows you to update
assessments as more information becomes available during the equipment life cycle. You can
use this information to improve both equipment reliability and the effectiveness of the
assessment process.
c. A plan should list all the documents referred to in it (including industry and government
documents), plus the plan owner’s internal documents, and their roles and responsibilities.
2
1/19/07 AC 20-157
a. You may use SAE International’s Aerospace Recommended Practice (ARP) 5890,
Guidelines for Preparing Reliability Assessment Plans for Electronic Engine Controls, dated
November 2002, as a framework to prepare a plan. Due to the decline both in the availability of
mil-spec parts and the use of military specifications and handbooks, ARP 5890 was produced to
illustrate alternative reliability assessment methods. Additional supporting references to prepare
a plan include:
a. Reliability assessment results should be viewed as numerical estimates that the proposed
design satisfies the product reliability requirements and goals. To achieve this objective,
conduct reliability assessments in accordance with the plan, and use the assessment results as
inputs to the system safety assessment and system architecture selection. SAE ARP 4761,
Guidelines and Methods for Conducting the Safety Assessment Process on Civil Airborne
Systems and Equipment, dated December 1996, shows how to determine system safety
assessment and system development.
b. Reliability assessment results are important inputs to many safety assessment tasks,
including fault trees, failure modes and effects analysis, and other tasks in SAE ARP 4761. If a
numerical safety assessment relies on reliability assessment approaches, then that portion of the
safety assessment must be consistent with reliability practices. The reliability assessment
provides an excellent opportunity to revisit and validate ground rules and assumptions used in
safety analysis.
c. SAE Aerospace Information Report (AIR) 5022, Reliability and Safety Process
Integration, dated July 1996, describes how to integrate the reliability and safety assessment
processes, and describes several of the commonly performed reliability and safety analysis
tasks, emphasizing their inter-relationships and common data elements.
3
1/19/07 AC 20-157
d. For highly integrated systems that perform complex and interrelated functions, include
validation and verification processes and activities in your plan. You can use SAE ARP 4754,
Certification Considerations for Highly-Integrated or Complex Aircraft Systems, dated
November 1996, as a guide for safety assessment validation and verification processes and
activities.
f. SAE ARP 5890 offers reliability assessment methods and tools. MIL-HDBK-217F CHG
Notice 2, Reliability Prediction of Electronic Equipment, dated February 1995, and Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 1413, Standard Methodology for Reliability
Prediction and Assessment for Electronic Systems and Equipment, dated December 1998, and
IEEE 1413.1, Guide for Selecting and Using Reliability Predictions Based on IEEE 1413, dated
September 2002, provide acceptable methods to predict a given electronic component’s
reliability. You can use the Reliability Analysis Center’s Nonelectronic Parts Reliability Data
(NPRD)-95, dated January 1995, Section 2, Part Summary, to determine mechanical parts failure
rates. All of these methods can accurately estimate expected systems and equipment reliability
before starting production.
g. Use SAE ARP 5150, Safety Assessment of Transport Airplanes in Commercial Service,
dated November 2003, to understand how to relate the reliability assessment and continued
airworthiness safety assessment processes. ARP 5150 also describes the important elements
involved in a safety analysis and the need to justify or validate the associated assumptions using
service experience data.
4
1/19/07 AC 20-157
a. Prepare and implement a plan for your systems and equipment using the guidelines of
SAE ARP 5890.
b. Establish a procedure using the framework of SAE ARP 5890 to ensure that the plan is
reviewed and updated as needed.
/Original Signed/
David W. Hempe
Manager, Aircraft Engineering Division
Aircraft Certification Service
5
1/19/07 AC 20-157
APPENDIX 1. DEFINITIONS
Equipment. An end item, sub-assembly, line-replaceable unit, engine, shop replaceable unit, or
system, designed by the plan owner.
Reliability. Determination that a system, subsystem, unit, or part will perform its intended
function for a specified interval under certain operational and environmental conditions.
Reliability Assessment Plan. A document recording the controlled, repeatable processes for
assessing the reliability of aircraft and engine electronic and electrical systems, including their
electromechanical elements and equipment
System. Combination of components, parts, and elements that are interconnected to perform one
or more functions. In this AC, “system” applies to electronic, electrical, electromechanical,
mechanical, hydraulic, pneumatic, or engine systems.
Validation. Determination that the requirements for a product are sufficiently correct and
complete.
6
1/19/07 AC 20-157
1. Code of Federal Regulations. Order 14 CFR parts 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 33, and 35 from the
Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, P.O. Box 37154, Pittsburgh, PA
15250-7954. Telephone (202) 512-1800, fax (202) 512-2104. You can also order online at
www.access.gpo.gov. You can also access the latest 14 CFRs on the FAA internet website
Regulatory and Guidance Library (RGL) at http://www.airweb.faa.gov/rgl.
2. FAA Advisory Circulars (AC). Order ACs from the U.S. Department of Transportation,
Subsequent Distribution Office, Ardmore East Business Center, 3341 Q 75th Avenue, Landover,
MD 20785. Telephone (301) 322-4477, fax (301) 386-5394. You can also view copies from
the FAA’s Regulatory and Guidance Library (RGL) at www.airweb.faa.gov/rgl. On the RGL
webpage, select “Advisory Circulars.” The following ACs are relevant to this AC:
3. SAE Documents. Order SAE documents from SAE International, 400 Commonwealth
Drive, Warrendale, PA 15096-0001. Telephone (724) 776-4970, fax (724) 776-0790. You can
also order copies online at www.sae.org. We referred to the following SAE documents in this
AC:
• ARP 5890, Guidelines for Preparing Reliability Assessment Plans for Electronic Engine
Controls, dated November 2002.
• ARP 4761, Guidelines and Methods for Conducting the Safety Assessment Process on
Civil Airborne Systems and Equipment, dated December 1996.
7
1/19/07 AC 20-157
• AIR 5022, Reliability and Safety Process Integration, dated July 1996.
5. Other Documents.
• IEEE 1413, Standard Methodology for Reliability Prediction and Assessment for
Electronic Systems and Equipment, dated December 1998.
• IEEE 1413.1, Guide for Selecting and Using Reliability Predictions Based on IEEE
1413, dated September 2002.
b. U.S. Military Documents. Order copies of military standards and handbooks from the
Department of Defense Single Stock Point, Subscription Services Desk, Building 4D, 700
Robbins Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19111-5098. Telephone (215) 697-2179, fax
(215) 697-1462. You can also order copies online at http://dodssp.daps.dla.mil/. We referred to
the following document in this AC:
8
1/19/07 AC 20-157