Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Robert W. Ring is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Robert W. Ring.


reliability and maintainability symposium | 2013

Reliability and Maintainability analysis of a high air pressure compressor facility

Fayssal M. Safie; Robert W. Ring; Stuart K. Cole

This paper discusses a Reliability, Availability, and Maintainability (RAM) independent assessment conducted to support the refurbishment of the Compressor Station at the NASA Langley Research Center (LaRC). The paper discusses the methodologies used by the assessment team to derive the repair by replacement (RR) strategies to improve the reliability and availability of the Compressor Station (Ref.1). This includes a RAPTOR simulation model that was used to generate the statistical data analysis needed to derive a 15-year investment plan to support the refurbishment of the facility. To summarize, study results clearly indicate that the air compressors are well past their design life. The major failures of Compressors indicate that significant latent failure causes are present. Given the occurrence of these high-cost failures following compressor overhauls, future major failures should be anticipated if compressors are not replaced. Given the results from the RR analysis, the study team recommended a compressor replacement strategy. Based on the data analysis, the RR strategy will lead to sustainable operations through significant improvements in reliability, availability, and the probability of meeting the air demand with acceptable investment cost that should translate, in the long run, into major cost savings. For example, the probability of meeting air demand improved from 79.7 percent for the Base Case to 97.3 percent. Expressed in terms of a reduction in the probability of failing to meet demand (1 in 5 days to 1 in 37 days), the improvement is about 700 percent. Similarly, compressor replacement improved the operational availability of the facility from 97.5 percent to 99.8 percent. Expressed in terms of a reduction in system unavailability (1 in 40 to 1 in 500), the improvement is better than 1000 percent (an order of magnitude improvement).


Safety and Reliability | 2010

Factors which Limit the Value of Additional Redundancy in Human Rated Launch Vehicle Systems

Joel M. Anderson; James E. Stott; Robert W. Ring; Spencer Hatfield; Gregory M. Kaltz

Abstract The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has embarked on an ambitious program to return humans to the moon and beyond. As NASA moves forward in the development and design of new launch vehicles for future space exploration, it must fully consider the implications that rule-based requirements for redundancy or fault tolerance have on system reliability/risk. These considerations include common cause failure, increased system complexity, combined serial and parallel configurations, and the impact of design features implemented to control premature activation. These factors and others must be considered in trade studies to support design decisions that balance safety, reliability, performance and system complexity to achieve a relatively simple, operable system that provides the safest and most reliable system within the specified performance requirements. This paper describes conditions under which additional functional redundancy can impede improved system reliability. Examples from current NASA programs including the Ares I Upper Stage will be shown.


Archive | 2010

Common Cause Failure Modeling: Aerospace Versus Nuclear

James E. Stott; Paul Britton; Robert W. Ring; Frank Hark; G. Spencer Hatfield


Archive | 2017

Lognormal Uncertainty Estimation for Failure Rates

Paul Britton; Mohammad Al Hassan; Robert W. Ring


Archive | 2017

Uncertainty Estimation Cheat Sheet for Probabilistic Risk Assessment

Paul Britton; Mohammad Al Hassan; Robert W. Ring


Archive | 2016

Source Data Applicability Impacts on Epistemic Uncertainty for Launch Vehicle Fault Tree Models

Mohammad Al Hassan; Steven Novack; Robert W. Ring


Archive | 2016

Risk Considerations of Bird Strikes to Space Launch Vehicles

Christy Hales; Robert W. Ring


Archive | 2016

Source Data Impacts on Epistemic Uncertainty for Launch Vehicle Fault Tree Models

Mohammad Al Hassan; Steven Novack; Robert W. Ring


Archive | 2015

Common Cause Failure Modeling

Frank Hark; Paul Britton; Robert W. Ring; Steven Novack


Archive | 2008

Modeling the Risk of Fire/Explosion Due to Oxidizer/Fuel Leaks in the Ares I Interstage

Robert W. Ring; James E. Stott; Christy Hales

Collaboration


Dive into the Robert W. Ring's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James E. Stott

Marshall Space Flight Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fayssal M. Safie

Marshall Space Flight Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gregory M. Kaltz

Marshall Space Flight Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joel M. Anderson

Marshall Space Flight Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Spencer Hatfield

Marshall Space Flight Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge