G'day,
I agree that it does depend on the product; and typically medium to high cost equipment, or extremely high volume production will benefit from this testing.
For my previous company we used HASS - which is a combination of vibration and temperature stress testing on a sample basis to monitor our production. Sure the costs were high, but these were spread over the entire build, making the per unit cost low.
We found an alarming amount of problems in the first few months that were attributed to component batch problems. Don't get me wrong, we had our share of production fallout issues as well, but the majority of problems were introduced by our suppliers. These suppliers were all known for their reliability, and were big name brands.
Another thing that people don't realise is the stress levels encountered during transport can be extremely high. Shock levels of > 60G are common, as are vibration events of >1.5Grms. And drop heights are just outrageous, old billy throwing your new server off the truck doesn't care too much about the glass house theory, but loves to throw anything that he can lift... say he cracks a poorly formed solder joint and this leads to failures at the customer which reflect badly upon your brand.
Stress testing will help to alleviate this by minimizing the weak points in a design during development, and maintaining the process/supply chain quality during manufacturing. Tuned screens will then break only "bad" units.
Also - once you have a production screen you can use this to qualify alternate components, or processes - such as lead free solder.
Lastly, in recent years, HASS has been picked up by some of the largest companies in the world. To sell to these guys you now have to perform both HALT & HASS.
I completely understand the example you've provided being somewhat overkill or unrelated to end use. Classic call on the kegger though, now thats the kind of human stress testing i'd be into.
Cheers,
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