Building Diagrams in Weibull++
To add a diagram in Weibull++, choose Home > Insert > Diagram, or right-click the RBDs folder in the current project explorer and choose Add Diagram on the shortcut menu.
To add blocks to a diagram, choose Diagram > Blocks and then select the type of block you wish to add.
Add Block
adds a standard block that represents a data sheet in a life data
or life-stress data folio. You can also add a standard block by
dragging the data sheet of interest from the Data Sheets page
of the control panel into the diagram. You can use any data sheet
in any life data or life-stress data folio, as long as it has
been calculated and is not using one of the competing failure
modes distributions. (A red flag over a block indicates that the
associated data sheet in the folio has either been deleted or
needs to be calculated.)
By default, standard blocks are named after the data sheets they represent. If you want to use a different name, right-click the block and choose Rename Block.
Note: It is possible to use standard blocks to represent the calculated results from certain other folio types by transferring those results to a life data folio or a life-stress data folio. This functionality is available for warranty folios, non-destructive degradation analysis folios, non-parametric LDA folios and event log folios; choose the appropriate command in the Transfer Life Data group on the ribbon tab specific to the folio type.
Add Node adds
a node block that functions like a switch that diagram paths move
through. A node block models an alternative form of redundancy
known as k-out-of-n redundancy.
A k-out-of-n node block can have n
paths leading into it and requires that k
out of n paths must function
for the system to function. There must be at least one path leading
into a node; therefore, a node block cannot be placed as the starting
block for a diagram.
Double-click the node block to specify the number of paths that must reach the node in order for the system to succeed.
Add Junction
adds a junction block, which is a non-failing block. Because diagrams
must flow from a single starting point to a single ending point,
you may need to use junction blocks as starting and/or ending
blocks (see Diagram
Analysis Constraints). They can also be used anywhere within
the diagram that you need a block that does not fail (i.e., does
not affect the system reliability).
Once you have added blocks to the diagram, you can then use connectors to connect the blocks and build the RBD. From the RBD, you can calculate the exact system reliability equation for the system, and obtain plots and results based on that equation.