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Design for Six Sigma

Design for Six Sigma. Department of Mechanical Engineering. DFSS: A systematic methodology of integrating statistical tools into product and process development to achieve predictive design quality and meet VOC requirements. 2 Major Divisions of Six Sigma. Process (DMAIC)

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Design for Six Sigma

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  1. Design for Six Sigma Department of Mechanical Engineering

  2. DFSS: A systematic methodology of integrating statistical tools into product and process development to achieve predictive design quality and meet VOC requirements.

  3. 2 Major Divisions of Six Sigma • Process (DMAIC) • Typically used in manufacturing • Enthusiasts can use anywhere • Design (DFSS) • New, unique or difficult • Thinking requires time

  4. DMAIC or DFSS Project? Define Measure Analyze Improve Control DMAIC Process Yes Yes No Is the Improvement a New or Redesigned Product or Process? Is Incremental Improvement Enough? Does a Process Exist? DFSS Process Yes No No Concept Design Optimize Capability

  5. Problem Definition Conceptual Design Embodiment Design Detail Design Communication of the Design

  6. N-U-D New-Unique-Difficult Design for Six Sigma Overview • Understand Customer Value • Gather Voice of Business (VOB) • Gather VOC • Translate VOC into PDS • Create / Select Concepts (QFD, Pugh) Critical Design Parameters Y= f (x1, x2, x3,,. . xn) • Minimize Complexity (DFMA / Modular Design) • Minimize Risk (FMEA) • Process Maps • Minimize Measurement Systems Noise Design Commercialization • Optimize (DOE / RSM) • Robustness of Design (Operations and customer noise) Optimize • Robustness Verification (Multi-Vari) • Statistical Tolerancing • Product Launch (Control Plans) Capability DMAIC

  7. Voice of the Customer Needs System Level Requirements System Level CFR’s Cp Subsystem Level Requirements Cp Subsystem Level CFRs….. Subassembly Level Requirements SubassemblyCritical Function Response(CFR) Cp Component ‘Critical to Function’ (CTF) Req’ts. Component CTF Specs…. Cp Houses of Quality Usage Mfg. Process Requirements Mfg. Process CTF Specs Cp Critical Parameter Management

  8. Where should we spend our time in ME470? DFSS Tools • Market Perceived Value Profile • RACI Diagram • Customer Selection Matrix • Customer Discussion Guide • Image KJ • Translation Worksheet • Requirements KJ • Importance Questionnaire • QFD HOQ #1 • Concept Generation • Pugh Screening Matrix • QFD HOQ #2 • Critical Parameter Tree • CPM Scorecard • Process Mapping • Weakness KJ • Basic Stats • Probability Determination • Exploratory Data Analysis • Control Charting • Capability Analysis (variables data) • Attribute Capability Analysis • Measurement System Analysis • Dimensional Variation Analysis • Monte Carlo Simulation • DFMEA • DFA Analysis Worksheet • Cause and Effects Matrix • Confidence Intervals • T-Test For Means Comparison • F-Test For Variances Comparison • Anova • Correlation • Regression (Simple Or Multiple) • Design Of Experiments • DOE with Centerpoints • Response Surface Experimental Design • Multiple Response Optimization • P-Diagram • Robust Design • Empirical Tolerancing • Life Data Analysis • Sample Size Planning • 2 Proportions Comparison • Regression Applied To Life Data • Accelerated Life Testing (ALT)

  9. Roadmap: Where are we going? Systems Engineering Voice of the Customer Needs Benchmarking Interviewing the Customer House of Quality System Level Product Design Specification Functional Analysis

  10. How Customers Select Among Competing Suppliers • Customers buy on Value Proposition • Value Proposition = Value Package relative to Price • Value Package includes all non-price attributes • Product • Information • Support

  11. Enjoyed a Good Coke Lately? • Unhappy customers tell 9-10 people about the problem. • Show video with Rollo • Happy customers tell 4-5 about the good service or product.

  12. Food for Thought • The Japanese (Automakers)…excel in the quality of fit and finishes, moldings that match, doors that don’t sag, materials that look good and wear well, flawless paint jobs. Most important of all, Japanese cars have earned a reputation for reliability, borne out by the generally lower rate of warranty claims they experience. Technically, most Japanese cars are fairly ordinary.

  13. Stages of Developing System Product Design Specifications • Gain the “feel” of the customer, experience their world. • Transform our understanding into customer requirements. • Establish the importance of each requirement and criteria for concepts.

  14. Stage 1: Experience their world Problem Definition Develop Discussion Guide Determine Which Customers to Visit Visit Customers Develop Image of Customer’s Environment and Needs

  15. Problem Definition • Why are we going? • Develop a common image of the farm customer in order to create a shared language for the new program team to describe, in customer terms, what is important to the customer. • What do we want to learn? • Better understand our farm customers’ workflow as we improve efficiency in field preparation. • Obtain first hand customer observation and input relative to understanding various elements impacting field preparation such as soil conditions (clay, sand, rocks, etc.), obstructions. • Explore appropriate Cummins responses so as to protect and enhance our position in this market by differentiation from John Deere such as consistent plowing speed, and overall time to complete filed preparation.

  16. Determine Which Customers to Visit • Create a “what do we want to learn” statement • To explore_______ in order to______ • To discover______ in order to______ • To learn_________ in order to_____ • Examples of customers • Distributors and dealers, end users • Lead/visionary customers • Lost customers, Unhappy customers • Customers using competitive products • External/Internal customers • Customers with non-US headquarters or focus • Good current customers • Customers who buy multiple products, or from multiple divisions

  17. Case Study: You work for a company that manufactures and sells flashlights. Sales are dropping.Your goal is to increase both sales and profits.

  18. What would you want in a new flashlight?What bugs you about current flashlights?

  19. There must be a better way…. • Assume you are charged with improving a flashlight • Who are your customers? (List at least 5) • Why would you go and visit these customers? • What would you hope to learn? • Talk to a neighbor for 2 minutes. • Flashlight: A Case for Holding Dead Batteries

  20. Creating an Interview Guide • Tell the customer why you are there • “We are here to discuss the design of an improved flashlight. Thank you for agreeing to work with us.” • 6-10 Key Topics • Based on what we want to learn • Open-ended • Subtopics as needed • It is a guide, not a script or questionnaire • Evoke images of experiences and needs

  21. Guidelines for Creating Discussion Questions • Scenes or images • Customer’s use environment • Perceptions of weaknesses/problems • Past experiences • Current considerations • Competitive comparison • Future enhancements • “Delighters”

  22. Question Formats to Avoid • “Would you like a system that could….?” • “Wouldn’t you agree that if we could produce a system that could…”

  23. Question Formats to Encourage • What- tend to focus conversation on events. “What problems have you experienced?” • How- tend to focus discussion on the process. “How do you use..?” • Why – require an explanation which my be helpful, but may elicit a defensive reaction!! • Could – are usually perceived as “gentle” and very open. “Could you give an example?”

  24. Clarity • Keep questions short • Break complex issues into a series of short questions • Avoid technical jargon • Be sensitive that jargon is more pervasive than we first think (EE) • Value of silence • Uncomfortable, but helpful

  25. Customer Visit • Assign Roles • Better detail • Different perspectives • Interviewer • Builds rapport • Asks most of the question and follows up • Manages the discussion, covering all key topics • Scribe • Takes detailed notes – verbatim when possible • Backstop for interviewer • Observer • Soaks up impressions • Listens “between the lines” • Backstop for the interviewer

  26. Representing RHIT • Do No Harm! • You are a representative of Rose. Say “we”, not “they.” • Assume that anything you say may be quoted, “According to Rose students….” • Do not make a commitment on a solution. • Don’t bad mouth the school (even if that is how you feel). Make an appointment and talk to Dr. Purdy or Dr. Western.

  27. Group Homework #1 • Form a group of 3-4 students. • Make a list of 5 potential “customer groups” for a flashlight. • Create an interview guide for one of your customer groups. • Conduct the interview using the format outlined and record the answers in Word. • Submission • Cover page with list of group members and section numbers. Include CM for one member. • List of 5 potential customer groups. • Interview guide with responses. • Due one week from today.

  28. Stage 2: Transform our Understanding into Customer Requirements Identify Key Voices Collect Voices from Interviews Link Voice with Image to Give Context Extract Key Ideas or Essences Translate Requirements to Our Language Develop Image of Customer’s Environment and Needs Collect Potent Images of Product Use

  29. Interview Transcription You will get two kinds of information. Voiced Requirements or Needs Images Needs Ideas Complaints Questions Suggestions Solutions Of the context/ environment of use Easy to spot!

  30. Case Study • Koch Paving Solutions • Project Objectives • Automate separation of aggregate from asphalt after mixing • Receive up to 6000 grams of mix • Desired that mix can be at up to 170 C • Room temperature mix is acceptable • Allow for different aggregate sizes • Allow for different mix stiffness and stickiness • Device must not fracture aggregate • Prototype production must cost less that $5000 • Complete project by October 1, 2004

  31. WHAT SCENES AND IMAGES DESCRIBE KOCH’S PROCESS FOR BREAKING UP MIX? PROCESS HAS CHALLENGES THAT NEED TO BE OVERCOME THE CUSTOMER HAS A CAN DO ATTITUDE PROCESS IS SPACE AND LABOR INTENSIVE WITH HIGH VOLUME THE PROCESS IS PAINFUL PROCESS INVOLVES RAPID HEAT TRANSFER THAT CAUSES MATERIAL PROPERTIES TO CHANGE THE EMPLOYEES ARE EXCITED ABOUT WORK THE COMPANY IS INNOVATIVE EMPLOYEES ARE WILLING AND EXCITED TO EXPERIMENT IT IS HARD TO BREAK APART THE MIX AND IT HURTS YOUR HANDS THEY USE A LOT OF TABLE ROOM TO SPREAD OUT THE HOT MIX TO KEEP IT FROM STICKING THE MIX STARTS OUT HOT BUT COOLS QUICKLY MANY PROCESSES HAVE BEEN TRIED TO SEPARATE THE AGGREGATE THEY PUT TAPE ON THEIR FINGERS BECAUSE THE MIX IS SO ROUGH MIX IS LIKE A FLUID WHEN HOT THERE AREPROCESSES THAT ARE NOT SUCCESSFUL FOR SEPARATING THE MIX. THERE ARE CURRENT PROCESSES THAT THEY USE TO SEPARATE THE MIX. BREAKING APART THE MIX IS TIME CONSUMING THEY RUB THEIR HANDS BACK AND FORTH WITH MIX BETWEEN THEIR HANDS TO MAKE IT COME APART. THEY USE A SPATULA TO SPREAD THE MIX OUT ON A TABLE WHEN IT IS TOO HOT TO HANDLE RUBBING BETWEEN TOWELS DOESN’T SEPARATE MIX LEAF BLOWERSDON’T SEPARATE MIX THERE IS AN ASSEMBLY LINE OF MIX WAITING TO BE BROKEN APART THE CURRENT PROCESS HAS CERTAIN PROPERTIES SOME COOLED MIXES ARE BONDED TOGETHER PROCESS HAS SIZE CONSTRAINTS MIX IS STICKY THE SEPARATED MIX MUST BE SMALLER THAN THE LARGEST ROCK IN THE MIX 3/29/04 Heather Coats, Jill Kurdys Sarah Sanborn, Patsy Brackin THE CONSISTENCY IS LIKE RICE KRISPIE TREATS WHEN YOU POUR IT OUT THE SMALLEST OPENING IS ABOUT 4.75 MM ON A SIDE THE COOLED AGGREGATE IS ALL STUCK TOGETHER

  32. Merging of Voices and Images • Take Key Voices • (trivial many to Vital Few) • Limit voices to top 40 (wow) • Link Voice with Image to Give Context • Extract Key Ideas or Essences • Discover the requirement(s) • Write clear and non-restrictive customer requirement statement(s).

  33. Translation Guidelines • Solution-free statements • Use factual language • Use multi-valued language • Use the Active Voice • Place emphatic words at end • Put statements in positive form • Be clear • What, not HOW!

  34. Translation Worksheet Number Name Customer Voice: Any Images: Key Items: Customer Requirement(s)/Needs(s): 1. “Give me one whole thought from your interview…” 2. “Now pick out any image from your visit that relates to that voice..” 5. “Does that voice connect differently with another image?” etc. 3. “What thoughts come to mind when you link those two? Any others?—Note all of them.” 4. “Take a stab at figuring out what their requirement is. Does your first line sound like a solution, if so what are you solving? Is the statement as concrete as you can make it?” Several iterations are normal and desirable!!

  35. Translation Worksheet Number Name Customer Voice: Any Images: Key Items: Customer Requirement(s)/Needs(s): Home Entertainment System Every time my wife and I talk about home theater systems, she complains that we have a beautiful decorated house that wasn’t designed to include a home theater system. The bulky mass module – I didn’t want to see it first thing when we walked into the room – so we moved it to the other side. 1st try: Homeowner has to do minimal alterations in the room to accommodate systems in desired locations. 2nd try: Homeowner has minimal awareness of the system. 3rd try: System components are well matched and unobtrusive. Disappointed with the way it looks after installation.

  36. Translation Worksheet Number Name Customer Voice: Any Images: Key Items: Customer Requirement(s)/Needs(s): Cars can’t go to court… so we use photos to show if the vehicles hit each other or not… the photo has to have clear detail to show paint transfer from one car to another after collision. If there was no collision, then no accident. Detailed picture proved that cars didn’t hit each other. Need detail in photos, details used as evidence, need to see paint transfer. 1st try: Photo shows details of car collision. 2nd try: Details in photo evidence transfer of paint from one car to another after collision. 3rd try: Photos show to the naked eye paint transfer between cars.

  37. Translation Worksheet Number Name Customer Voice: Any Images: Key Items: Customer Requirement(s)/Needs(s): It should be able to handle different sizes. 1st try: Device should accept mixes with different size of aggregate. 2nd try: Device should accept mixes that contain aggregate from 4.75 mm to 1.5”. Size varies They use both English and metric units.

  38. Customer Comments • “See how the leather on the bottom of the bag is all scratched; it’s ugly” • “When I’m standing in line at the cashier trying to find my checkbook while balancing my bag on my knee, I feel like a stork.” • “This bag is my life; if I lose it I’m in big trouble.” • “There’s nothing worse than a banana that’s been squished by the edge of a textbook.” • “I never use both straps on my knapsack; I just sling it over one shoulder.”

  39. Translation Worksheet Quiz#3 CM Name Customer Voice: Any Images: Key Items: Customer Requirement(s)/Needs(s): “When I’m standing in line at the cashier trying to find my checkbook while balancing my bag on my knee, I feel like a stork.” 3. “What thoughts come to mind when you link those two? Any others?—Note all of them.”

  40. Use Translated Requirements • Translation is “Clarification on Steroids!!” • Analyze Customer Requirements • You are a customer advocate! • What are the most important requirements? • Diversity of requirements. • Form a hierarchy of customer requirements.

  41. WHAT ARE THE KEY CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS FOR THE MAX GRAVITY BREAKER? THE DEVICE HAS ECONOMIC CONSTRAINTS THE DEVICE HAS PHYSICAL CONSTRAINTS DEVICE HAS VOLUME REQUIREMENTS THERE ARE SIZE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE MIX THERE ARE TIME REQUIRE-MENTS FOR THE PROCESS THERE ARE COST LIMITS SEPARATED PARTICLES MUST BE SMALLER THAN THE LARGEST PIECE OF AGGREGATE DEVICE SHOULD BE OPTIMIZED FOR 1500 GRAMS. KEEP COST UNDER $5000 THE LARGEST SIZE IS 1.5” DEVICE SHOULD SEPARATE MIX IN 15 MINUTES DEVICE SHOULD HANDLE 500 – 600 GRAMS THE SMALLEST AGGREGATE SIZE IS A 4.75 MM SIEVE. MINIMIZE COST DEVICE MUST SEPARATE MIX IN ONE HOUR THE DEVICE HAS SPECIFIC INPUT/OUTPUT REQUIREMENTS THERE ARE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE OUTPUTS FROM THE DEVICE DEVICE HAS REQUIREMENTS FOR ACCEPTING THE MIX DEVICE IS COMPLETELY AUTOMATED AGGREGATE IS INTACT AFTER PROCESSING ALL MIX MUST ENTER THE DEVICE AFTER EXITING THE DEVICE, ASPHALT MUST ADHERE TO AGGREGATE DEVICE SHOULD ACCEPT MIXES WITH DIFFERENT SIZES OF AGGREGATE 3/29/04 Heather Coats Jill Kurdys Sarah Sanborn Patsy Brackin DEVICE SHOULD OUTPUT COOL, SEPARATED MIX DEVICE SHOULD ACCEPT MIX AT 170 C

  42. Group Homework #2 • Develop at least 3 requirements for a flashlight. • Work in groups of 3-4. (Hopefully the group that you were in for the interview.) • Read your interview transcript and identify at least one image and three voices. • Use a translation worksheet to develop customer requirements. • Translation worksheets will be posted on the web. • Submission • Cover page with list of group members and section numbers. Include CM for one member. • Interview guide with responses. • Identification of one image and three voices. • Translation of three voices into customer requirements on the translation worksheet. • Due one week from today.

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