What Is PFMEA?

Process FMEA is a systematic analysis conducted during the manufacturing process design and development phase to identify potential failure modes in manufacturing and assembly processes. PFMEA assumes the product design is correct and focuses on whether "the manufacturing process can consistently produce products that meet design requirements."

Core Question: Given the current process design, are all known sources of variation adequately controlled to ensure product characteristics consistently meet specification requirements?

PFMEA vs. DFMEA Comparison

Dimension DFMEA PFMEA
Analysis Subject Product design Manufacturing/assembly process
Focus Can the design achieve its function? Can the process consistently manufacture?
Failure Causes Design deficiencies (material, geometry, interfaces) Process variation (Man, Machine, Material, Method, Environment)
Prevention Controls Design specs, simulation, redundancy Process parameter control, error-proofing, SPC
Detection Controls Design review, test validation In-process inspection, automated detection
Primary Owner Design Engineer Manufacturing/Process Engineer

PFMEA Structure Analysis

PFMEA uses the process flow diagram as the basis for a three-level structure:

Level Description Example (Engine Block Machining)
Process Item / Higher Level The overall manufacturing process or product Engine Cylinder Block
Process Step / Focus Element The specific operation being analyzed Cylinder Bore Honing Operation
Process Work Element / Lower Level (4M) Man, Machine, Material, Method (Environment) Honing machine spindle accuracy, honing stone material
4M Classification: In PFMEA, failure causes are typically categorized by 4M (sometimes 5M or 6M) — Man, Machine, Material, Method, Measurement, and Milieu (Environment).

Process Functions and Requirements

Process Functions

Describe what each operation should accomplish:

  • Machine/form product characteristics
  • Assemble components
  • Handle/transport
  • Inspect/test
  • Package/label

Process Requirements

Quantified process performance metrics:

  • Product characteristic tolerances (e.g., 82 +/- 0.01 mm)
  • Process parameter ranges (e.g., torque 45 +/- 5 Nm)
  • Cycle time requirements
  • Process capability requirements (Cpk of 1.67 or higher)
  • Inspection frequency and sampling plans

Common PFMEA Failure Modes

Operation Type Typical Failure Modes Possible Failure Causes
Machining Dimension out of tolerance, surface roughness non-conforming, GD&T out of spec Tool wear, fixture misalignment, insufficient coolant
Welding Insufficient weld strength, porosity, cracks, excessive spatter Current parameter deviation, insufficient shielding gas, workpiece contamination
Assembly Missing part, insufficient/excessive torque, wrong part installed Operator omission, uncalibrated tool, part mix-up
Heat Treatment Hardness out of spec, excessive distortion, decarburization Temperature deviation, insufficient soak time, atmosphere control abnormality
Painting Uneven film thickness, poor adhesion, color variation, orange peel Spray parameter deviation, insufficient surface pretreatment, ambient humidity

PFMEA Control Measures

Prevention Controls

  • Error-proofing (Poka-Yoke): Physically prevent incorrect operations
  • Process parameter monitoring: SPC control charts
  • Preventive equipment maintenance: TPM program
  • Standardized operations: Work instructions
  • Personnel training and certification: Job qualification requirements
  • Tooling and fixture precision maintenance

Detection Controls

  • In-line automated inspection: Vision systems, sensors
  • In-process inspection: Gauges and check fixtures
  • Final inspection: Functional testing, visual inspection
  • Statistical sampling inspection: AQL sampling plans
  • Traceability system: Lot tracking
  • Audits and patrol inspection

PFMEA to Control Plan Relationship

PFMEA outputs directly translate into Control Plan content:

PFMEA Output
Key characteristics
Control methods
Detection means
Control Plan
Control characteristics
Control methods
Reaction plans
Work Instructions
Operation steps
Inspection requirements
Abnormality handling