Abstract

AbstractProducts are often offered with warranties, which have become a common marketing strategy intended to indicate that product quality is guaranteed by the firm. Warranties can attract consumer purchases, but they also incur warranty costs, especially when firms falsely claim that their products are high quality; therefore, the determination of an appropriate warranty policy is of particular importance. This study considers a two‐dimensional warranty for complex repairable products, such as a vehicle, a lathe, or industrial machinery, with consideration of (1) burn‐in (run‐in), which is a supervised accelerating testing process performed before product launch to prevent defective products from being sold on the market, and (2) periodic preventive maintenance, which is performed during the usage period to prevent the occurrence of unexpected failures under normal usage conditions. The optimal burn‐in (run‐in) time and preventive maintenance intervals are determined with the aim of minimizing warranty costs for firms. The results of the study show that given a higher repair cost and a greater infant mortality failure rate, more frequent preventive maintenance is preferable, and the repair cost has the largest effect on the total warranty cost for the firm.

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