Fail-safe

Fail-safe

Fail-safe or fail-secure describes a device or feature which, in the event of failure, responds in a way that will cause no harm or at least a minimum of harm to other devices or danger to personnel.

Definitions

*“A device that will provide its intended function upon loss of power.” (2007 NFPA-80)
*An operation which ensures that a failure of equipment, process, or system does not propagate beyond the immediate environs of the failing entity.

Examples

Mechanical or physical

* Aircraft landing on an aircraft carrier increase the throttle to full power at touchdown. If the arresting wires fail to capture the plane, it safely takes off again. [cite web|first=Tom|last=Harris|title=How Aircraft Carriers Work|url=http://science.howstuffworks.com/aircraft-carrier4.htm|work=HowStuffWorks, Inc|accessdate=2007-10-20]
* Coiling/Rolling Fire Doors that are activated by building alarm systems or local smoke detectors must close automatically when signaled regardless of power. In case of power outage the coiling fire door does not need to close, but must be capable of automatic closing when given a signal from the building alarm systems or smoke detectors.
* Luggage carts in airports in which the hand-brake must be held down at all times. If it is released, the cart will stop. See dead man's switch.
* Air brakes on railway trains and air brakes on trucks. The brakes are held in the 'off' position by air pressure created in the brake system. Should a brake line split, or a carriage become de-coupled, the air pressure will be lost and the brakes applied. It is impossible to drive a train or truck with a serious leak in the air brake system.
* Motorized gates - In case of power outage the gate can be pushed open by hand with no crank or key required. However, as this would allow virtually anyone to go through the gate, a "fail-secure" design is used: In a power outage, the gate can only be opened by a hand crank that is usually kept in a safe area.
* During early Apollo program missions to the Moon, the spacecraft was put on a free return trajectory – if the engines failed at lunar orbit insertion, the craft would safely coast back to Earth.

Electrical or electronic

* Avionics using redundant systems to perform the same computation with voting logic to determine the "safe" result.
* Traffic light controllers use a "Conflict Monitor Unit" to detect faults or conflicting signals and switch an intersection to all flashing red, rather than displaying potentially dangerous conflicting signals, i.e. showing green in all directions. [Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, Federal Highway Administration, 2003]
* The automatic protection of programs and/or processing systems when a hardware or software failure is detected in a computer system. See fail-safe (computer).
* A control operation or function that prevents improper system functioning or catastrophic degradation in the event of circuit malfunction or operator error; for example, the failsafe track circuit used to control railway block signals.
* A precautionary secondary mechanism that achieves the same task as the primary mechanism; for example, the activation of grenades when the primary detonator is destroyed, or the release of lethal gas when a device that activates explosives is destroyed.Fact|date=December 2007
* The iron pallet ballast on the Bathyscaphe is dropped to allow the submarine to ascend. The ballast is held in place by electromagnets. If electrical power fails the ballast is released, and the submarine then ascends to safety.

trategic

* A system that has been structured such that it cannot fail (or that the probability of such failure is extremely low) to accomplish its assigned mission, regardless of environmental factors; for example, the hardening of a nuclear missile bunker, or the dispersion of nuclear bombers to multiple secret locations.

Other Terminology

Fail-safe (foolproof) devices are also known as Poka-Yoke devices. Poka-yoke, a Japanese term, was coined by Shigeo Shingo, a quality guru.Fact|date=October 2008

See also

* Control theory
* Dead man's switch
* Fail-deadly
* Fault-tolerant system
* Interlock
* Safe-life design
* Safety engineering

References


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  • Fail-Safe — oder dt. Ausfallsicher ( Trotz Fehler sicher wörtlich: zusammengesetzt aus engl. fail – hier: ausfallen und safe – hier: gefahrlos ) bezeichnet jede Eigenschaft eines Systems, die im Fall eines Fehlers zu möglichst geringem Schaden führt. Bei… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • fail safe — To revert to a safe condition in the event of failure • • • Main Entry: ↑fail * * * fail safe «FAYL SAYF», adjective, verb, safed, saf|ing. or failed , fail|ing . –adj. 1. having a …   Useful english dictionary

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  • fail-safe — fail′ safe adj. 1) elo equipped with a secondary system that ensures continued operation even if the primary system fails 2) mil denoting a system of safeguards in which bombers may not proceed past a prearranged point or nuclear weapons may not… …   From formal English to slang

  • fail-safe — ► ADJECTIVE 1) causing machinery to revert to a safe condition in the event of a breakdown. 2) unlikely or unable to fail …   English terms dictionary

  • fail-safe — [fāl′sāf΄] adj. [ FAIL, v. + SAFE, adj.] designating, of, or involving a procedure designed to prevent malfunctioning or unintentional operation, often specif. of nuclear armed aircraft, through an intricate system of protective devices …   English World dictionary

  • fail-safe — [adj] guaranteed not to fail confident, covered, foolproof, protected, reliable, reliant, safeguarded, secure, sound, sure; concepts 535,542,544 …   New thesaurus

  • fail-safe — I noun a mechanism capable of returning to a safe state in case there is a failure or malfunction • Hypernyms: ↑mechanism II adjective 1. guaranteed not to fail a fail safe recipe for cheese souffle • Similar to: ↑secure …   Useful english dictionary

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