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Redefining Mold Maintenance

Maintenance

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Redefining Mold Maintenance

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    1. Redefining Mold Maintenance

    2. Maintenance…The Final Frontier Globalization now requires more than ever, your expensive fleet of molds to be production ready and process reliable. Companies steeped in a reactive, firefighting culture are upgrading inefficient practices to meet the challenges of today’s market. The disorganized approach of hand writing notes in log books and random instructions in typical work order formats is disappearing. The bar… and the stakes… have been raised, while resources, budgets and inventory…are continuously lowered. The key to improving mold performance and maintenance efficiency lies in the ability to identify and understand the issues, standardize maintenance practices and to fully utilize the data that you spend time collecting. MoldTrax 4.0 was born for this.

    3. Typical Maintenance Culture Firefighting the hot issues…over and over Freelancing repairs…no shop consistency or standardization…everyone doing their own thing Documentation practices…”journal” type W/O records with no structure and of little value Little communication with outside vendors concerning mold requirements or maintenance practices.

    4. Types of Systems Currently Used Manual Systems Log Books Manual worksheets, checklists and work orders Electronic Systems In-house generated electronic systems Off-the-shelf CMMS packages (computerized maintenance management system) ERP’s (Enterprise Resource Planning) maintenance modules

    5. Typical Log Book Entry

    6. Excel Format

    7. Typical W/O Format

    8. Why Don’t Typical Work Order Systems Work ? Illegible handwriting Incomplete data entries No structure to entries…scattered thought process Inconsistent (non-standard) terminology Manual “searching” for defects and corrective actions No data relationship between what was needed and what was done Toolmakers required to read and decipher entries to utilize No visual impact

    9. Why Don’t Generic Asset Reliability Systems Work ? Generic terminology, structure and flow not intuitive to the run/repair cycle of a mold Many screen changes, cumbersome to use Critical information still buried in single text fields No visual connection Bottom Line: If toolmakers don’t like it…they won’t use it …

    10. If a Maintenance System: Requires toolmakers and repair technicians to type or write subjective entries using inconsistent terminology into a single text field, then they are being paid to collect data…that no one will use.

    11. 3 Basic Questions a Mold Maintenance System Should Answer What is your #1 unscheduled mold stop reason and associated corrective action costs? What is your #1 mold issue or part defect? What is your #1 mold with the highest maintenance costs (per hour of production) All data related to these 3 questions needs to be easily sorted and viewed by: Mold number, product description, configuration, press, start and stop dates and times, associated personnel, tooling used and labor hours required.

    12. What Are The Keys To A Successful Maintenance Software System? So then…

    13. A Successful System Must 1st Bring Value to the Toolmaker or the Repair Technician by being: Easy to use Minimal typing Quick, on-the-fly data entry Column headings to prompt correct entries Drop-down lists of standard plant terminology in critical fields

    14. A Successful System Must 1st Bring Value to the Toolmaker or the Repair Technician by being: Easy to understand Analyze past issues and repairs made quickly and accurately Visual impact through digital images or drawings

    15. A Successful System Must Also Provide a Reporting Structure That Allows Supervisors, Managers and Engineers To: Analyze the true costs of mold maintenance by mold, configuration, product line or vendors. Monitor shop efficiency & employee performance Set defect targets and mold performance goals Optimize mold down time hours Reduce labor hrs. and maximize tooling life Budget wisely and more effectively

    16. And Finally…A Successful System Must Allow for future data skills growth. It does not make economic sense to purchase a W/O system that barely meets your current requirements, then spend time populating that data base with many molds and tooling. You are now handcuffed to a system that in time, will leave you wanting…and needing more. MoldTrax 4.0 has many features that you may or may not initially use, and as shop data skills grow, these features will allow you to further standardize and track all aspects of your mold performance and maintenance efficiency.

    17. So what kind of data needs to be collected and utilized?

    18. Typical Mold Information Collected

    19. Fact Most companies already collect 80% of the information required to make informed decisions leading to dramatic improvements in mold performance and maintenance efficiency They just don’t use it…

    20. But now you can… Introducing

    21. MoldTrax 4.0 What does it do? MoldTrax 4.0 tracks the performance and maintenance of a variety of molds and dies, and has the capability to track different tooling configurations run in a single mold base. It then presents this information in over 25 unique reports. How Does it work? Mold performance data is collected at the press and in the shop using specifically formatted work sheets, or entered directly into the software for a paperless system.

    22. MoldTrax 4.0 Data Flow

    23. So How is MoldTrax Different? Other systems: All other CMMS (computerized maintenance management systems) both large and small, utilize only one or two text fields in which to track work that is required and performed on a mold. MoldTrax 4.0: Provides “maintenance designed” formats that provide specific columns to enter data into which is quicker, more accurate and allows full utilization of the data.

    24. The MoldTrax Method MT4 was designed with input from many toolmakers who spent their entire careers in the mold repair/refurbish field. It’s sole purpose is to track and report on the unique variables of mold performance and repair. MT4 screens and data entry fields follow the logical progression of a typical run/repair cycle, so those not PC savvy can easily enter and utilize the data. MT4 uses drop down lists to populate specific fields with your company specific terminology. This insures accurate and consistent data collection, and allows the data to be filtered and sorted for troubleshooting and reporting.

    25. MoldTrax 4.0 Features

    26. Detail Mold Information Screen

    27. Tooling Data Tab

    28. Troubleshooting Guide

    29. Tech Tips Screen

    30. Maintenance Tracking Screen

    31. Maintenance Tracking Screen

    32. Maintenance Tracking Screen

    33. Maintenance Tracking Screen

    34. Maintenance Tracking Screen

    35. MoldTrax 4.0 Data Utilization

    36. Specific Text Fields Mean Comprehensive Reporting

    37. Single Mold Canned Reports (Statistical and Reference)

    38. New FastTrax Reports

    39. Target Unscheduled Downtime

    40. Defect Type Analysis Report Shows Where to Focus Attention

    41. Instantly Recognize Molds or Products With High Defect Counts

    42. Track Maintenance Costs per Run Time Hour

    43. Instantly See Tooling Costs by Mold, Description, Type, Quantity Used or Date Installed

    44. Set Goals and Measure Results

    45. Remember Your molds are the most critical and expensive link to the health and prosperity of your company. They deserve the complete and undivided attention that only a systemized approach can offer. MoldTrax 4.0 Track the past. Secure the future

    46. MoldTrax 4.0 Setting A New Standard in Maintenance

    47. About the developer… Steve Johnson works as the Maintenance Systems Manager for Progressive Components. Previous experience includes 7 years as Senior Maintenance Tooling Engineer for Abbott Laboratories/Hospira, a leading medical device manufacturer. His experience also includes twenty five years as a toolmaker at Calmar, Inc., redesigning and rebuilding high cavitation close tolerance multicavity molds. Prior to this, he served four years in the U.S. Navy as a jet mechanic training reservists on maintaining the A4L Skyhawk. Steve conducts nationwide seminars for ToolingDocs, on developing a systematic approach to mold maintenance. He also conducts maintenance capability assessments and hands-on training for plastics companies helping them to improve mold performance and shop maintenance efficiency. This experience has enabled Steve to design and develop MoldTrax 4.0, a unique comprehensive documentation system for tracking mold performance and maintenance from a “real world” perspective. Steve has authored many articles for various plastics industry magazines including his columns Across The Bench found in Moldmaking Technology and Mold Shop for Plastics Technology..

    48. MoldTrax 4.0 $2,500.00 for net workable version--- plus 5 additional seats in the same facility at no charge No annual fees. No annual maintenance costs. MoldTrax 3.0 users upgrade to 4.0...free of charge Download 15 day full working copy for free from www.MoldTrax.com or, set up a personalized walk through of the system at your PC via a Webex connection or an in-house demo at your facility (1-2 hrs). Contact: Steve Johnson 419-289-0281 or Progressive Components 800-269-6653 Visit us on the web at www.MoldTrax.com The minimum system requirements to operate MoldTrax 4.0 are a Pentium III  1.2 GHz with 512 Meg of RAM and at least 100 meg of disk space free. Supported operating systems are Windows 2000, and XP Professional. Windows 95, 98, Me are not supported.

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