Be Analytic Solutions LLP

Be Analytic Solutions LLP πŸ› οΈ Your global partner in Reliability Engineering & NABL Testing. Helping you bridge the gap between design and market-ready excellence

We provide expert RAMS Analysis, EMI/EMC, and Environmental Testing for Aerospace, Automotive, and Medical industries. BE Analytic Solutions LLP is the first unique company of excellence offering Reliability ,Availability, Maintainability and Safety (RAMS) as an Engineering Service to customers in India. The company was established in 2010 by a group of eminent scientists and experienced engineers

in Bangalore, India. In today’s highly competitive market, product/system Quality and Reliability are among the key differentiators. Many contracts, today, also require delivering RAMS engineering analysis report as a contractual obligation – this is where we can assist you. We offer cost effective turnkey solutions on Reliability Engineering Analysis. We cater to the needs of companies in many segments, including Aerospace, Automotive, Biomedical, Oil & Gas, EPC, Railway & Metro Rail, HVAC(heating, ventilation, and air conditioning),Industrial products, Electrical and Electronic products. We cover the entire life cycle of the product/System, starting from concept to phase off. This helps in improved product design and also meets the compliance requirements to many of the industry’s rigorous standards - IEC 61508,EN50126,MIL-STD and many more

Happy International Labour Day! πŸ› οΈToday we honour every working professional who brings skill, dedication, and precision...
01/05/2026

Happy International Labour Day! πŸ› οΈ
Today we honour every working professional who brings skill, dedication, and precision to their craft every single day.
From our team at BE Analytic Solutions LLP to yours β€” thank you for the work you do. The world runs safer because of you.

EN 50126, EN 50129, EN 50716 β€” a plain guide to railway compliance standardsπŸ“‹ Three railway standards. One compliance fr...
30/04/2026

EN 50126, EN 50129, EN 50716 β€” a plain guide to railway compliance standards

πŸ“‹ Three railway standards. One compliance framework.

If you're involved in railway system supply in India or internationally, these are the documents that govern your RAMS and safety obligations:

EN 50126 β€” The RAMS lifecycle standard
This is the top-level document. It defines the process for specifying, demonstrating, and managing RAMS performance across the entire system lifecycle. Every railway project starts here.

EN 50129 β€” Safety-related electronic systems
This standard governs how safety cases are structured, how hazard analysis is conducted, and how SIL is applied to railway electronic systems. Mandatory for signalling, ATP, CBTC, and similar subsystems.

EN 50716 β€” Railway software (2023, successor to EN 50128)
If your subsystem includes software that performs a safety function, it must comply with EN 50716. This standard defines how software must be developed, tested, and verified based on the assigned SIL.

IEC 61508 provides the overarching functional safety framework beneath all three.

Where does your project sit in this framework? Drop a comment and let us know which standard you're currently working against.

Need help interpreting which standards apply to your subsystem?

πŸ“ž +91 8095000439 | πŸ“§ [email protected] |🌐 www.beanalytic.com


India's railway expansion and the RAMS compliance challengeIndia's metro rail sector is in the middle of its biggest exp...
29/04/2026

India's railway expansion and the RAMS compliance challenge

India's metro rail sector is in the middle of its biggest expansion in history.

Bengaluru, Pune, Ahmedabad, Surat, Nagpur, Chennai β€” new corridors are being tendered, contracted, and built at a scale not seen before.

And every single one carries the same compliance requirement buried in the specification: EN 50126 RAMS compliance.

This is creating a real gap for many Indian suppliers, OEMs, and integrators who have strong technical capability but limited experience with structured RAMS documentation.

Common gaps we see:
β†’ No formal RAMS Management Plan at programme start
β†’ MTBF predictions without standard-aligned methodology
β†’ FMEA done but disconnected from the hazard log
β†’ Safety cases assembled at the last minute before submission

The cost of closing these gaps late is 3 to 4 times higher than addressing them early.

BE Analytic has built a practice specifically to help Indian railway teams close this gap β€” with practical, engineering-focused RAMS and safety documentation that stands up to customer and regulatory review.

Whether you're entering railway for the first time or scaling an existing RAMS capability, we can help.

πŸ“ž +91 8095000439 | πŸ“§ [email protected] 🌐 www.beanalytic.com

Share this with a colleague working in Indian railway πŸ‘‡

SIL levels in railway: what every supplier needs to understand⚠️ Safety Integrity Level (SIL) is not just a number on a ...
28/04/2026

SIL levels in railway: what every supplier needs to understand

⚠️ Safety Integrity Level (SIL) is not just a number on a specification. It's a commitment to how rigorously your safety function must be designed.

In railway engineering, SIL is defined by IEC 61508 and applied via EN 50129. Here's what each level means:

SIL 0 β€” No specific safety requirement. No special constraints.

SIL 1 β€” Low risk. Tolerable failure rate 10⁻⁡ to 10⁻⁢ per hour.

SIL 2 β€” Medium risk. Tolerable failure rate 10⁻⁢ to 10⁻⁷ per hour. Structured V&V required.

SIL 3 β€” High risk. Used in ATP and train protection. Extremely structured design and independent verification.

SIL 4 β€” Highest integrity. Critical signalling functions. Near-zero failure rates. Most stringent documentation requirements.

The SIL you're assigned determines:
β†’ How your software must be developed (EN 50716)
β†’ How your hardware must be designed and tested
β†’ How much independent verification you need
β†’ The depth of your safety case evidence

Getting SIL allocation wrong at programme start costs significantly more to fix than getting it right.

BE Analytic provides SIL interpretation and allocation support for railway projects of all sizes.

πŸ“§ [email protected]
πŸ“ž +91 8095000439
🌐 www.beanalytic.com

27/04/2026

What is Railway RAMS?

RAMS stands for Reliability, Availability, Maintainability, and Safety. These four pillars help railway teams design systems that perform consistently, stay operational, recover quickly after failures, and control safety risk.

In this short explainer, we cover:

Reliability
Availability
Maintainability
Safety
EN 50126 and the railway RAMS process
Need RAMS support for your railway project?
BE Analytic
www.beanalytic.com
+91 8095000439

27/04/2026

What is Railway RAMS?

RAMS stands for Reliability, Availability, Maintainability, and Safety. These four pillars help railway teams design systems that perform consistently, stay operational, recover quickly after failures, and control safety risk.

In this short explainer, we cover:

Reliability
Availability
Maintainability
Safety
EN 50126 and the railway RAMS process
Need RAMS support for your railway project?
BE Analytic
www.beanalytic.com
+91 8095000439

πŸš† What is RAMS, and why does every railway project need it?If you work in railway β€” as an engineer, project manager, pro...
27/04/2026

πŸš† What is RAMS, and why does every railway project need it?

If you work in railway β€” as an engineer, project manager, procurement specialist, or system integrator β€” RAMS is a term you'll encounter in every major contract and specification.

RAMS stands for Reliability, Availability, Maintainability, and Safety.

It's governed internationally by EN 50126, the CENELEC standard that defines how railway systems must demonstrate dependability and safety performance across their entire lifecycle.

Here's what each letter means in practice:

RELIABILITY: The probability that a system performs its required function without failure under stated conditions for a defined time period. Think: how often does it fail?

AVAILABILITY: The ratio of time a system is operational versus total time. Think: when I need it, is it working?

MAINTAINABILITY: How quickly and easily the system can be restored after failure. Think: when it fails, how fast can we fix it?

SAFETY: The absence of catastrophic consequences. Think: when it fails, does anyone get hurt?

For Indian metro rail projects β€” Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune, and beyond β€” EN 50126 RAMS compliance is now standard in tender specifications. Without it, your product doesn't get approved.

BE Analytic provides end-to-end Railway RAMS services β€” from RAMS Management Plan to safety case submission.

Learn more: www.beanalytic.com/railway-rams-sil-services

πŸ“ž +91 8095000439 | πŸ“§ [email protected]

⚑ EMI/EMC WEEK β€” Day 5: Emissions vs ImmunityThe two halves of EMC compliance that every product must pass independently...
17/04/2026

⚑ EMI/EMC WEEK β€” Day 5: Emissions vs Immunity

The two halves of EMC compliance that every product must pass independently.

━━━━━━━━━━
πŸ“€ EMISSIONS TESTING
━━━━━━━━━━
Does your device emit too much electromagnetic energy?

Radiated Emissions (RE):
β†’ Measured in anechoic chamber using calibrated antenna
β†’ MIL-STD-461 RE102: 10 kHz to 18 GHz
β†’ CISPR 25: 9 kHz to 6 GHz at 1 metre

Conducted Emissions (CE):
β†’ Measured via LISN at power input
β†’ MIL-STD-461 CE102: 10 kHz to 10 MHz
β†’ IEC 61000-3 series

━━━━━━━━━━
πŸ“₯ IMMUNITY TESTING
━━━━━━━━━━
Can your device survive the electromagnetic environment it will operate in?

Radiated Susceptibility:
β†’ RS103 (MIL-STD-461): Electric field, 2 MHz to 40 GHz
β†’ IEC 61000-4-3: 80 MHz to 6 GHz (commercial)

Conducted Susceptibility:
β†’ CS114: Bulk Cable Injection, 10 kHz to 200 MHz
β†’ IEC 61000-4-6: 150 kHz to 80 MHz

ESD Immunity:
β†’ IEC 61000-4-2 / CS118

Transient and Surge Immunity:
β†’ IEC 61000-4-4 (Fast Transient / Burst)
β†’ IEC 61000-4-5 (Surge)
β†’ CS116 (Damped sinusoidal transients)

CRITICAL FACT: These are independent test categories with independent pass/fail criteria. A product that achieves full emissions compliance can still fail any immunity category.

BE Analytic runs the complete emissions and immunity programme.
NABL Accredited | MIL-STD-461 | CISPR 25 | IEC 61000 | DO-160

Contact us:
πŸ“ž +91 8095000439 | πŸ“§ [email protected] | 🌐 www.beanalytic.com

πŸš—βœˆοΈ EMI/EMC WEEK β€” Day 4: Automotive and Aerospace EMC StandardsTwo of engineering's most demanding sectors. Two complet...
16/04/2026

πŸš—βœˆοΈ EMI/EMC WEEK β€” Day 4: Automotive and Aerospace EMC Standards

Two of engineering's most demanding sectors. Two completely different EMC frameworks.

━━━━━━━━━━
AUTOMOTIVE: CISPR 25 + ISO 11452
━━━━━━━━━━
CISPR 25 is the global standard for protecting vehicle radio and communication systems from electromagnetic interference generated by automotive components. As vehicles now carry GPS, FM/AM, Bluetooth, LTE, and V2X receivers, the stakes for CISPR 25 compliance have never been higher.

Tests performed at BE Analytic:
✦ CISPR 25 β€” Conducted Emission 100 kHz to 108 MHz
✦ CISPR 25 β€” Radiated Emission 9 kHz to 6 GHz at 1 metre
✦ ISO 11452-4 β€” Bulk Current Injection (BCI) immunity
✦ ISO 11452-2 β€” Direct RF Power Injection immunity
✦ ISO 7637-2 β€” Voltage Transient Emission and Immunity
✦ ISO 10605 β€” ESD (powered and unpowered)
✦ ISO 16750-2 β€” Electrical disturbance testing

━━━━━━━━━━
AEROSPACE: DO-160
━━━━━━━━━━
RTCA DO-160 is the comprehensive environmental and EMC standard for airborne electronic equipment. Its EMC sections cover everything from power input disturbances and audio frequency susceptibility to lightning (both induced transients and direct effects).

DO-160 tests at BE Analytic include:
✦ Magnetic Effects · Power Input
✦ Voltage Spikes · Audio Frequency Conducted Susceptibility
✦ RF Susceptibility (Radiated and Conducted)
✦ RF Emission · Lightning Induced Transient Susceptibility
✦ Lightning Direct Effects · ESD

Together with MIL-STD-461 for defence, BE Analytic offers complete multi-sector EMC testing under one roof in Bengaluru.

Contact us:
πŸ“ž +91 8095000439 | πŸ“§ [email protected] |🌐 www.beanalytic.com

πŸ›‘οΈ EMI/EMC WEEK β€” Day 3: MIL-STD-461 ExplainedFor any product entering Indian defence or aerospace procurement, one EMC ...
15/04/2026

πŸ›‘οΈ EMI/EMC WEEK β€” Day 3: MIL-STD-461 Explained

For any product entering Indian defence or aerospace procurement, one EMC standard is above all others: MIL-STD-461 Revision G.

Here are the 11 test requirements every defence programme must address:

CONDUCTED EMISSIONS
✦ CE101 β€” Power Leads, 30 Hz to 10 kHz
✦ CE102 β€” Power Leads, 10 kHz to 10 MHz

CONDUCTED SUSCEPTIBILITY
✦ CS101 β€” Power Leads susceptibility, 30 Hz to 150 kHz
✦ CS114 β€” Bulk Cable Injection, 10 kHz to 200 MHz
✦ CS115 β€” Impulse Excitation via Bulk Cable Injection
✦ CS116 β€” Damped Sinusoidal Transients, 10 kHz to 100 MHz
✦ CS118 β€” ESD Conducted Susceptibility

RADIATED EMISSIONS
✦ RE101 β€” Magnetic Field Emissions, 30 Hz to 100 kHz
✦ RE102 β€” Electric Field Emissions, 10 kHz to 18 GHz

RADIATED SUSCEPTIBILITY
✦ RS101 β€” Magnetic Field Susceptibility, 30 Hz to 100 kHz
✦ RS103 β€” Electric Field Susceptibility, 2 MHz to 40 GHz

WHY 40 GHz FOR RS103?
Commercial immunity standards go to 6 GHz. MIL-STD-461 RS103 demands 40 GHz because defence systems operate near radar, electronic warfare platforms, and high-power RF transmitters. The test must reflect the actual electromagnetic threat environment.

THE NABL REQUIREMENT:
For Indian defence qualification, test results must come from a NABL accredited laboratory. BE Analytic in Bengaluru holds this recognition β€” making our test reports valid for Indian defence procurement.

πŸ“ž +91 8095000439 | 🌐 www.beanalytic.com

πŸ”¬ EMI/EMC WEEK β€” Day 2: Radiated vs Conducted EMIIf your product failed EMC testing, the first question isn't "why?" β€” i...
14/04/2026

πŸ”¬ EMI/EMC WEEK β€” Day 2: Radiated vs Conducted EMI

If your product failed EMC testing, the first question isn't "why?" β€” it's "which type?"

Because the answer changes everything about the corrective action.

━━━━━━━━━━
πŸ“‘ RADIATED EMI
━━━━━━━━━━
Energy propagating through the air from the device or its cables.

Test setup: Anechoic or semi-anechoic chamber using calibrated receive antenna and spectrum analyser
Frequency: RE102 (MIL-STD-461) covers 10 kHz to 18 GHz; CISPR 25 measures from 9 kHz to 6 GHz at 1 metre
Most common causes: Poor PCB shielding, unfiltered clock signals, cables acting as unintentional antennas

━━━━━━━━━━
πŸ”Œ CONDUCTED EMI
━━━━━━━━━━
Electrical noise conducted along the power supply or signal cables.

Test setup: Shielded room with Line Impedance Stabilisation Network (LISN) at the power input
Frequency: CE101 covers 30 Hz to 10 kHz; CE102 covers 10 kHz to 10 MHz (MIL-STD-461)
Most common causes: Switching power supply noise, inadequate input filter, poor grounding

CRITICAL POINT: A product can pass radiated emissions and fail conducted emissions β€” on the same test day, on the same device.

These are independent test categories with independent pass/fail criteria. Fixing one does not fix the other.

BE Analytic's EMI/EMC lab runs all four MIL-STD-461 test categories:
βœ” CE101 / CE102 β€” Conducted Emissions
βœ” CS101 / CS114 / CS115 / CS116 / CS118 β€” Conducted Susceptibility
βœ” RE101 / RE102 β€” Radiated Emissions
βœ” RS101 / RS103 β€” Radiated Susceptibility

πŸ“§ [email protected] . πŸ“ž +91 8095000439 Β· 🌐 www.beanalytic.com

πŸ“’ EMI/EMC TESTING WEEK β€” Day 1: What Is EMI and EMC?Every day this week we're publishing one essential piece of EMI/EMC ...
13/04/2026

πŸ“’ EMI/EMC TESTING WEEK β€” Day 1: What Is EMI and EMC?

Every day this week we're publishing one essential piece of EMI/EMC content β€” the concepts, the standards, and the real cost of getting it wrong. Whether you're in defence, automotive, aerospace, or industrial electronics, this series is for you.

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
DAY 1 β€” EMI vs EMC: THE CORE DISTINCTION
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

EMI β€” Electromagnetic Interference β€” is any electromagnetic disturbance that degrades the performance of an electronic device. It has two forms:

πŸ”΄ RADIATED EMI β€” energy that propagates through the air from a device or its cables
πŸ”΄ CONDUCTED EMI β€” electrical noise that travels through power and signal cables

EMC β€” Electromagnetic Compatibility β€” is the comprehensive framework ensuring your product:

βœ… Does NOT emit EMI beyond regulatory limits (Emissions testing)
βœ… CAN withstand EMI from other sources without malfunction (Immunity testing)

WHY THIS MATTERS FOR YOUR PROGRAMME:

In defence electronics, an EMC failure doesn't mean a rejected test report. It means a mission-critical system failing in the field β€” potentially during deployment.

In automotive, it means ECU malfunction β€” at speed, on the road.

In aerospace, it means airborne system failure.

The regulatory framework that governs this:
β†’ MIL-STD-461 β€” Defence and aerospace (DGAQA recognised at BE Analytic)
β†’ CISPR 25 β€” Automotive component emissions
β†’ IEC 61000 series β€” Industrial and commercial
β†’ DO-160 β€” Airborne electronics

BE Analytic's EMI/EMC laboratory in Bengaluru is NABL accredited β€” one of the very few facilities in India equipped for MIL-STD-461 defence EMC testing alongside the full commercial and automotive range.

Follow this page for Day 2 tomorrow: Radiated vs Conducted EMI explained.

πŸ“ž +91 8095000439 | 🌐 www.beanalytic.com | πŸ“§ [email protected]

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