No fault found (NFF), no trouble found (NTF) or no defect found (NDF) are terms used in the field of maintenance, where a unit is removed from service following a complaint of a perceived fault by operators or an alarm from its BIT (built-in test) equipment. The unit is then checked, but no anomaly is detected by the maintainer. Consequently, the unit is returned to service with no repair performed.[1][2][3]
If there is an underlying fault that has not been detected the unit may be returned for repair several times with no fault identified. Alternative descriptors include:[4]
No fault found (NFF)
Cannot duplicate (CND)
Fault not found (FNF)
No trouble found (NTF)
No defect found (NDF)
Hidden failures
False failures
^Söderholm, Peter (January 2007). "A system view of the No Fault Found (NFF) phenomenon". Reliability Engineering & System Safety. 92 (1): 1–14. doi:10.1016/j.ress.2005.11.004.
^James, I.; Lumbard, D.; Willis, I.; Goble, J. (1 January 2003). "Investigating no fault found in the aerospace industry". Annual Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, 2003. pp. 441–446. doi:10.1109/RAMS.2003.1182029. ISBN978-0-7803-7717-2. S2CID109886043.
^Qi, Haiyu; Ganesan, Sanka; Pecht, Michael (May 2008). "No-fault-found and intermittent failures in electronic products". Microelectronics Reliability. 48 (5): 663–674. doi:10.1016/j.microrel.2008.02.003.