Related Topics:

Fault Trees

Block Properties

Load Sharing Gates

Load sharing gates behave just like load sharing containers in that they define the load and the number required (k-out-of-n vote). The blocks connected to a load sharing gate are called dependent events and are similar to contained load sharing blocks in an RBD. Additional gates are not allowed below a load sharing gate.

The next two figures show a fault tree diagram using a load sharing gate and the equivalent reliability block diagram. To understand these diagrams, remember that the fault tree looks at failure combinations while the RBD looks at success combinations. Thus, the fault tree shows a system that will fail if component A fails, component C fails or three out of the three B components fail.

In the case of the RBD, the system will succeed if component A functions, at least one of the three B components functions and component C functions.

To configure a load sharing gate, in addition to the common block properties, you will need to specify the Vote number, which is the number of events that lead to the gate that must succeed in order for the gate to succeed. If the number of events does not succeed, then the gate is considered to be failed.

Additional options are available for the load sharing container, including:

When this option is selected, no other properties will be available for the block; note, however, that any properties you have already specified are simply hidden because they are not relevant. The settings will reappear if you clear the Set block as failed option.

 

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