FMEA Implementation Procedure for Manufacturing: Step-by-Step Practical Guide with AIAG-VDA Method
Last updated 2026.02.13Types and Purpose of FMEA
DFMEA (Design FMEA) identifies potential failure modes during the product design phase. For example, when designing automotive brake pads, it analyzes material selection or thickness design errors in advance.
PFMEA (Process FMEA) analyzes defects that may occur in manufacturing processes. It addresses process-induced defects such as dimensional defects in CNC machining or insufficient strength in welding processes.
Team Formation and Preparation
Effective FMEA requires cross-functional team composition:
- Team Leader: Quality/Production Engineering Manager
- Core Members: Design, Production, Quality, Maintenance, Customer Service Representatives
- Support Members: Procurement, Logistics Representatives
Preparation Items: Product/process drawings, process flow diagrams (PFD), historical defect data, customer complaint records
Analysis Procedure (AIAG-VDA 7 Steps)
Step 1: Project Planning
Define product/process scope, set objectives, establish timeline
Step 2: Structure Analysis
Decompose the system into components. Example: Electric screwdriver → Motor, Gearbox, Battery, Control circuit
Step 3: Function Analysis
Define functions and requirements for each component. Example: Motor → "Rotate at 1,500 RPM"
Step 4: Failure Analysis
Identify Failure Modes:
- DFMEA example: Insufficient bearing durability
- PFMEA example: Improper torque wrench tightening
Step 5: Risk Assessment
The new AIAG-VDA method is based on Action Priority (AP):
Traditional RPN Method (for reference):
- RPN = Severity (S) × Occurrence (O) × Detection (D)
- Each item rated 1-10 points
- Priority improvement for RPN ≥ 125
AIAG-VDA AP Method (recommended):
- Severity: 1-10 points, 9-10 points require mandatory improvement
- Occurrence: Based on actual process data
- Detection: Effectiveness of current control methods
Practical Example: Battery welding process
- Failure Mode: Insufficient weld strength
- S=8 (safety issue), O=4 (occurs twice monthly), D=6 (difficult to detect before shipment)
- AP: High → Immediate improvement required
Step 6: Improvement Activities
Priority Decision Criteria:
- Severity 9-10 items (safety/regulatory)
- AP High items
- High customer impact items
Improvement Action Examples:
- Design changes: Material replacement, structural improvement
- Process enhancement: Adding Poka-Yoke devices, increasing inspection frequency
- Management methods: Implementing SPC, revising work standards
Step 7: Documentation and Tracking
Conduct reassessment after improvement, manage change history
Form Completion Guidelines
AIAG-VDA Integrated Form Essentials:
- 5-Column Method: Connect Structure → Function → Failure → Effect → Cause
- AP Matrix: Visual priority display through S-O-D combination
- Deliverables: FMEA worksheet, AP table, improvement tracking sheet
Completion Tips:
- Describe failure modes clearly as "insufficient~" or "excessive~"
- Analyze causes to root cause using 5-Why technique
- Categorize current control methods as prevention/detection
- Set target AP to Low or Medium
Practical Operation Points:
- Update DFMEA immediately upon design changes
- Complete PFMEA before introducing new processes
- Review quarterly as Living Document
- Integrate with ERP/MES for automatic defect data reflection