Microsoft Excel is already on most corporate laptops. Countless free FMECA templates are available from universities, engineering blogs, and reliability forums. Even a premium, professionally designed template costs $20–50—far less than a $5,000/year software license.
Beyond ~500 rows, Excel becomes sluggish. Sorting and filtering large FMECAs (e.g., for an automotive braking system with 2,000+ failure modes) is painful. Pivot tables help, but the experience degrades. Dedicated software can handle 50,000+ rows without lag. fmeca template excel
For teams without cloud PLM systems, Excel files can be emailed, saved on shared drives, or managed via basic Git (though that’s rare). Each analyst can work on a local copy and merge changes manually—clunky, but possible. The Bad: Significant Limitations to Know 1. No real-time collaboration This is the #1 pain point. When two engineers open the same FMECA Excel file on a shared drive, the second saver overwrites the first’s changes. Modern FMECA software (e.g., Xfmea, ReliaSoft) uses a database backend with check-in/check-out and change tracking. Excel has none of that. You’ll waste hours reconciling versions. Microsoft Excel is already on most corporate laptops