Major Fault definition

Major Fault means a major system breakdown resulting in the failure of 50% or more of the incoming telephone lines and internal extensions;
Major Fault means a fault that requires capital equipment to fix or remedy such as a substation blasts, cable blasts, damaged transformer, damaged switchgear etc;
Major Fault means a fault in any part of the Product which does not constitute a Critical Fault but which prevents the Buyer operating a material part of its business for which it purchased the Product Minor Fault means a fault which is agreed to be minor by the Company and the Buyer, but which does not constitute a Critical Fault, Major Fault or Important Fault. Major Release means any material improved, modified or corrected version of any of the Product or Program Documentation from time to time issued by the Company pursuant to Application Support which shall be identified as such by the Company at the time of issue of the Major Release to the Buyer by the use of the Version Release Number. Minor Release means any minor improved, modified or corrected version of any of the Product or Program Documentation from time to time issued by the Company pursuant to Application Support below which shall be identified as such by the Company at the time of issue of the Minor Release to the Buyer by the use of the Version Release Number. Patch means a solution to an issue notified to the Company by the Buyer and which does not constitute a Release. Priority terminology used on the Support Portal to translate the criticality of a fault to its prioritisation. Critical, High, Medium and Low priorities correspond respectively to Critical, Major, Important and Minor faults. Product means the software programs and modules identified in Schedule 1Standard Products. Program Documentation means the instruction manuals, user guides and other information, including any New Release of the same, to be made available by the Company at its discretion in either printed or machine readable form to the Buyer relevant to the Product. Releases means together Major Release, Minor Release, Maintenance Release, Patch and Script and ‘Release’ shall mean any of them. Script means batch instructions in an appropriate software language to update or alter the database schema.

Examples of Major Fault in a sentence

  • End user will receive a two-hourly update to the progress relating to a Major Fault Condition.

  • Critical Fault – defined as preventing a User from doing her/his designated job task with the System or the System becoming unavailable to any User 2 hours 48 hours Major Fault – defined as substantially inhibiting a User from doing his/her designated job task with the System.

  • For example an outage of a broadband aggregation node supporting a number of buildings would be deemed a Major Fault.

  • Major Fault: Where a substantial part of the Equipment is unusable or where all incoming / outgoing lines or operator consoles are inactive.

  • Major Fault (Priority 2) – Data - 12 Elapsed hours (Metro) and 16 Elapsed Hours (Regional).


More Definitions of Major Fault

Major Fault. One or more of the following: -unscheduled total system failure (whereby all functionality of the system is unavailable and there is repeated failure to reboot for any reason); -inability to gain access to the System through at least 25% of telephone, trunk or extension port at any one time; -inability to gain access to the System through the system Manager’s terminal; -inoperability of at least one disk drive in the System that either stores messages or date; -loss of system integration; -continual unscheduled System restarts; -inability of System to collect Call Detail Records (“CDR”) data; -message waiting or networking not functioning System-wide; -total failure of power supply or batteries; -any fault or failure, which renders the System unsafe to operate -the console, or common control processor is out of service due to the failure of Products provided by Exchange; -25% or more of the data peripherals supported by the Exchange voice System’s common control are out of service at any time due to failure of the Products; -25% or more of the special network capabilities supported by the Exchange Voice System’s common control are out of service at any time due to the failure of products provided by Exchange; “Minor Fault” Any failure of System, Products or Software that is not included in the definition of a Major Fault;
Major Fault means a fault that would require capital intensive equipment replacement to rectify;
Major Fault means a fault that requires of high capital cost to fix or remedy such as a substation blast, cable blasts, damaged transformer, damaged switchgear, burnt HV pole, failure of SCADA system;
Major Fault means: (i) any Failure of a component of the GoAmerica Facilities for which there is a back-up component which can be used to continue operation of such component functionality in an uninterrupted and non-degraded manner; or (ii) any Degradation of a Non-Redundant Component, that affects [**]or more Rogers Customers within [**] of 1 Business Day.
Major Fault refers to any Fault that is reproducible and documented by Customer, which seriously compromises the use of any part of the CS Solution.
Major Fault any condition resulting in a degradation in the technical performance of the Company Fibres such that they are unable to support telecommunication transmissions or fail to meet the attenuation levels or if the attenuation levels exceed 0.25dB/Km as specified in Schedule 2; "Minor Fault" any failure in the Company Fibres to meet the attenuation levels set out in Schedule 2 save that if such attenuation levels exceed 0.25dB/Km the Fault shall be classified as a Major Fault; "Necessary Consents" all wayleaves, licences, consents, approvals and permits, whether of a public or private nature, to enable the Cables to be lawfully installed, retained in situ and repaired;
Major Fault means that a Decoder System: (a) does not materially perform in accordance with the Specification other than any failure to meet the requirements in respect of the Software as set out in Article 2.6; or (b) does not comply with Eur1 certification.