Why defect attribution is one of the hardest problems in DTF systems
In integrated DTF systems, failure symptoms alone are insufficient to determine responsibility
What constitutes a true manufacturing defect
A defect exists when products deviate from specifications or tolerances under controlled conditions.
What does not constitute a manufacturing defect
Failures caused by environment, parameters, or integration do not imply manufacturing defects.
Why symptoms alone are insufficient for defect judgment
Identical symptoms may originate from different system layers
How system misuse is often mistaken for manufacturing failure
Use outside validated domains shifts risk away from manufacturing.
Why repeated troubleshooting increases attribution error
Reactive adjustments compound variability and obscure root causes.manufacturing variability
The role of responsibility boundaries in defect diagnosis
Responsibility boundaries provide an objective diagnostic framework.manufacturer responsibility boundaries
Why mislabeling misuse as defects increases systemic risk
Incorrect attribution delays resolution and escalates instability.
How correct attribution improves outcomes for all parties
Clear attribution enables cooperative system improvement
Conclusion
Defects and misuse must be distinguished to achieve sustainable performance.DTF Manufacturing Insights
