No Fault Found - An Update.

If you've been keeping up with the No Fault Found Syndrome that I've written about many times in the past, then there's a video out there you should see....more on that in a moment.

(If you haven't read my prior blog entries about No Fault Found, feel free to read them HERE.) 

Briefly, No Fault Found ("NFF") occurs when (according to
Wikipedia) "an originally reported mode of failure can't be duplicated by the evaluating technician and therefore the potential defect can't be fixed."

I like to define it this way: an electronic device signals a malfunction, but when the device is tested in the lab, the lab techs can't find anything wrong with it.  Strange, but true.  Happens all the time, and costs us (the consuming public) a huge amount of money.  Why?  Read my blog....

I host a think tank on LinkedIn (appropriately named, the "No Fault Found Think Tank") in which we discuss this issue and try to figure out ways to fix it.  One of the participants,
Copernicus Technology Ltd., is at the cutting edge of this issue and has proprietary equipment that can address NFF.

Check out the Copernicus Technology video
HERE.  If you're in the aviation or consumer electronics industries, pay attention to these guys.  They might just save you (and me) some money.

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