How to do System Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

Understand Task 205 and Apply the Commentary to Enhance its Value and Effectiveness

Introduction

What you’ll learn

  • Learn the Purpose of System Hazard Analysis (Task 205) and Differences vs. Sub System Hazard Analysis.
  • Understand Task 205 Description.
  • Understand Task 205’s Reporting and Contracting Requirements.
  • Apply the Value-adding Course Commentary to Improve System Hazard Analysis.

Course Content

  • Course Introduction –> 1 lecture • 4min.
  • Course Videos –> 2 lectures • 48min.
  • Course Resources –> 1 lecture • 47min.
  • Free Peak at the Next Courses in the Series –> 3 lectures • 31min.

How to do System Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

Requirements

Introduction

Hello, everyone, and welcome to the Safety Artisan, where you will find professional, pragmatic, and impartial safety training resources and videos. I’m Simon, your host, and I’m recording this on the 13th of April 2020. And given the circumstances when I record this, I hope this finds you all well.

 

System Hazard Analysis Task 205

Let’s get on to our topic for today, which is System Hazard Analysis. Now, system hazard analysis is, as you may know, is Task 205 in the Mil. Standard 882E system safety standard.

 

Topics for this Session

In this session, we will cover purpose, task description, reporting, contracting, and some commentary – although I’ll be making commentary all the way through. Going to the back to the top, the yellow highlighting with this and with task 204, I’m using the yellow highlighting to indicate differences between 205 and 204 because they are superficially quite similar. And then I’m using underlining to emphasize those things that I want to really bring to your attention and emphasize.

Within task 205, purpose. We’ve got four purposes for this one. Verify sub system compliance and recommend necessary actions – fourth one there. And then in the middle of the sandwich, we’ve got the identification of hazards, both between the subsystem interfaces and faults from the subsystem propagating upwards to the overall system and identifying hazards in the integrated system design. So, it’s quite different emphasis to 204, which was really thinking about subsystems in isolation.

We’ve got five slides of task description, a couple on reporting, one on contracting – nothing new there – and several commentaries.

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