Download - Ship Maintenance Costs
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Ship Maintenance CostsBrittany Basilone
Rudy CatahanPaul Heroman
Jean-Ali Tavassoli
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All Hands on Deck• Team
o Brittany Basilone, MS OR (Fall 2012)o Rudy Catahan, MS SE (Fall 2013)o Paul Heroman, MS OR (Fall 2012)o Jean-Ali Tavassoli, MS OR (Fall 2012)
• Sponsoro NAVSEA Cost Community
• Naval Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division (NSWCCD) Code 2110, Cost Effectiveness Brancho Molly Mertz, Cost Team Lead
• NAVSEA 05C Cost Engineering and Industrial Analysis Groupo Technical Warrant Holder for Cost Analysis
• Naval Center for Cost Analysis (NCCA)o Mike Carey, VAMOSC Program Manager
* Views expressed in this study are those of the authors and do not reflect views of the US Navy
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Agenda• Introduction
o Problem Definitiono Types of Maintenanceo Data Sources
• Analysiso DDG-51 Flight 1 Historical (First half of life)o DDG-51 Flight 1 Forecast (Second half of life)
• Wrap-Upo Other Analysis Performedo Further Studies
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Introduction
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Problem Definition
• Theoretical Modelingo Estimating ship maintenance is currently
very static (historical average applied to every year of estimate)
o Although aging impacts are inherent in the average, estimates are not as dynamic as desired
• Realityo Maintenance costs are not the same
every yearo Goal is to adjust cost estimating models
to better reflect reality
Maintenance Costs (Fictional)
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Historical Actuals 100 120 130 140 150Theoretical Modeling 128 128 128 128 128
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Purpose• Importance of cost estimating is at an all-time high
o Increased scrutiny of defense budgets/Fiscal constraints o Navy must be better equipped to anticipate costs
• Lifecycle cost estimating includes 4 phases:o Research & Developmento Procuremento Operations & Sustainment (O&S) – tends to be most expensiveo Disposal
Years
Proc
urem
e nt
O&SDisposal
$
R&DMaintenance
*Image from Defense Acquisition University, www.dau.mil
$
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Deliverables• Sponsor has requested the following:
1. Age curve/factor for DDG-51class at appropriate levels of maintenance2. Forecasted factors for future DDG-51 maintenance costs3. Guidance/documentation on analysis & application
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Types of Maintenance
Intermediate Level • Includes tasks that are outside crew’s capabilities• Can be performed pier side, underway, or at an I-level
facility
Organizational Level • Performed by ship’s crew• Includes only material costs
Depot Level • Typically performed at a shipyard, in dry dock or
pier side to accomplish more intense maintenance tasks
• Determined by Chief of Naval Operations (CNO)
* Funding source has large impact on maintenance categorization
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Data• Visibility and Management of Operating and Support Costs (VAMOSC)
o Congressionally mandated database that collects/houses O&S costs for the entire Navyo Use in analysis:
• O-Level: material costs & manhours• I-Level: labor/material costs & manhours• D-Level: scheduled maintenance costs
• OPNAVNOTE 4700 (dated August 2011)o Annual budgeting/scheduling document from the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) that lists the
maintenance timeline necessary for a ship class to reach its Expected Service Lifeo Use in analysis: D-Level planned maintenance
• Naval Vessel Registero Official Inventory of US Naval Ships and Service Crafto Use in analysis: technical summary of each ship class
Ship Characteristics DDG-51 Flight I FFG 7 CG-47Class Name Arleigh Burke Oliver Hazard Perry TiconderogaShip Type Guided Missile Destroyer Guided Missile Frigate Guided Missile CruiserCommission Date 7/4/1991 1/29/1983 1/22/1983VAMOSC Years of Data 1992-2011 1984-2011 1984-2011Hulls used in dataset DDG-51 to DDG-71 FFG-36 to FFG-61 CG-47 to CG-72Ages represented in dataset 1 to 16 1 to 28 1 to 22Number of ship-years of data 315 654 540
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Analysis:DDG-51 Flight 1
Historical
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DDG-51 Flight 1Class Name: Arleigh BurkeShip Type: Guided Missile DestroyerNVR Reference Hull: DDG-51Overall Length: 505 ftExtreme Beam: 66 ftMaximum Nav. Draft: 31 ftLight Displacement: 6,691 LTFull Displacement: 8,960 LTHull Material: Steel Hull, Steel SuperstructureNumber of Propellers: 2Propulsion Type: Gas TurbinesOfficers: 26Enlisted: 330
DDG 51 Flight 1 will be the focus of our analysis
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O-Level Maintenance• O-Level costs include
material only (performed by ship’s crew)
• O-Level median costs generally increase with age
• O-Level median manhours show similar trendo Manhours show greater variability
across age levels than total costo Variability driven by few ship years
that reflect high manhours that do not translate into high costs• Suggests that these maintenance
actions are not material-intensive
• Future research required to gain more insight into these outliers
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• Throughout the first 15 years of life, O-level maintenance costs increase
• Distributions show different shapes, along with increasing means
Age Progression0-5 years
5-10 years
10-15 years
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I-Level Maintenance• I-Level costs include Labor
and Materialo Labor is the main cost driver (~85%
of I-Level costs)o Material costs are generally
consistent across ages
• Median costs and manhours generally increase with ageo Variability tends to increase with
age
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• Bin count and size are thrown off by outliers in years 5-15
• Although costs appear to increase with age, histogram view is not appropriate
Age Progression0-5 years
5-10 years
10-15 years
15
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D-Level Maintenance• D-Level maintenance is planned discretely by CNO
o Methodology for O/I-Level analysis cannot be applied to D-Level
• D-Level maintenance periods scheduled by OPNAVNOTE 4700
• Schedule above represents a notional profileo Guidance changes every year
Month
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D-Level Maintenance• Compared actual cost returns with OPNAVNOTE 4700 guidance
o Converted manday guidance to notional FY13$ for comparison (labor and material)
• Most hulls have lower cumulative costs than plannedo Actual costs reflect multiple iterations of OPNAVNOTE 4700 guidance
• Notional line represents latest guidance o Possibility that ships are not being maintained to the extent required (unable to confirm) o Possibility that work is being completed at another level of maintenance (unable to confirm)
OPNAVNOTE 4700 FY13$
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Analysis:DDG-51 Flight 1
Forecast
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Forecast Analysis• Methodology
o Normalized general aging trends to compare multiple combatant classes• Quantified aging impacts that can be applied to future ship platforms
o Forecasted future maintenance costs of DDG-51 Flight 1
Ship Characteristics DDG-51 Flight I FFG 7 CG-47Class Name Arleigh Burke Oliver Hazard Perry TiconderogaShip Type Guided Missile Destroyer Guided Missile Frigate Guided Missile CruiserNVR Reference Hull DDG-51 FFG-36 CG-47Commission Date 7/4/1991 1/29/1983 1/22/1983Overall Length (Ft) 505 453 567Light Displacement (LT) 6,691 3,174 7,646Full Displacement (LT) 8,960 4,100 10,142
Hull MaterialSteel Hull, Steel Superstructure
Steel Hull, Aluminum Superstructure
Steel Hull, Aluminum Superstructure
Propulsion Type Gas Turbines Gas Turbines Gas TurbinesOffi cers 26 19 33Enlisted 330 200 341
VAMOSC Query Date 10/3/2012 10/12/2012 10/10/2012VAMOSC Years of Data 1992-2011 1984-2011 1984-2011Hulls used in dataset DDG-51 to DDG-71 FFG-36 to FFG-61 CG-47 to CG-72Ages represented in dataset 1 to 16 1 to 28 1 to 22Number of ship-years of data 315 654 540
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O-Level Cost Aging Factors
FFG-7 shows an increasing trend in terms of manhours, but not in
terms of costs.
DDG-51 Flight I FFG 7 CG-47slope $23 $1 $10
R2 0.89 0.00 0.71
Annual Adder (FY13$/LT)
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I-Level Cost Aging Factors
Classes generally show similar aging factors
DDG-51 Flight I FFG 7 CG-47slope $24 $25 $18
R2 0.88 0.72 0.82
Annual Adder (FY13$/LT)
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O-Level DDG-51 Forecast• DDG-51 Flight 1 data available through age 16• Leveraged other historical combatant trends to extrapolate
future of DDG-51 maintenance costs• Range of forecasts can be used to develop risk ranges
Possible future trends based on other historical
combatants
Ship Class DDG FFG CGAges 1-16 7-28 1-22
Type of Trendline Linear Linear LinearR2 0.89 0.00 0.71
O-Level Forecasting Summary
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I-Level DDG-51 Forecast
Possible future trends based on other historical
combatants
• DDG-51 Flight 1 data available through age 16• Leveraged other historical combatant trends to extrapolate future of DDG-51
maintenance costs• Range of forecasts can be used to develop risk ranges
Ship Class DDG FFG CGAges 1-16 7-28 1-22
Type of Trendline Linear Exponential ExponentialR2 0.89 0.86 0.91
I-Level Forecasting Summary
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Wrap-Up
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Other Analysis Performed• Investigated non-cost element effects on trends
o Operational Tempo: Steaming Hours Underway/Not Underwayo Enlisted Personnel count
• Considered stochastic approach o Visually inspected distributions of cost by age using histogramso Found best fit probability density function
• Started initial analysis on Amphibious vesselso O/I-Level analysis performedo Further data understanding necessary
• Researched existing studieso Service Life Extension Plan (SLEP) Study for Amphibious vesselo Technical Foundation Paper for Amphibious vessel
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Further Studies• Refine current approach
o Gain additional data understanding• Research cause of outliers• Consider why planned maintenance costs do not match actual costs expended
o Compare actual costs with budgeted costs• Explore VAMOSC Depot Universe to obtain actual start and end dates of
maintenance periods• Overlay annual O&MN allocations to compare actuals costs with budgets
o Examine if trends hold across multiple ship types• Submarines• Air Craft Carriers• Amphibious Vessels
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Deliverables• Sponsor has requested the following:
1. Age curve/factor for DDG-51class at appropriate levels of maintenance DDG-51 Flight 1 aging factors for O-Level and I-Level maintenance costs
2. Forecasted factors for future DDG-51 maintenance costs DDG-51 Flight 1 forecasted aging factors based on FFG-7 and CG-47 classes
3. Guidance/documentation on analysis & application Guidance/Documentation of analysis and application included in package to
sponsor
• Aging Impact analysis will be incorporated into estimates produced by the, NAVSEA 05C, Navy’s technical warrant holder for cost.
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Thank you, you were an ORSE-ome audience
Questions?
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Bibliography• http://www.navy.mil/view_image.asp?id=130721• http://www.navy.mil/view_image.asp?id=68934• http://www.navy.mil/view_image.asp?id=137844• https://www.dau.mil/