1 / 17

IENG 451

IENG 451. Standardized Work. Standardized Work . Benefits of Standardization Process stability – stability means repeatability Clear stop and start points for each process Organizational learning Employee involvement and poka -yoke (error proofing) Kaizen – continuous improvement

melita
Download Presentation

IENG 451

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IENG 451 Standardized Work

  2. Standardized Work • Benefits of Standardization • Process stability – stability means repeatability • Clear stop and start points for each process • Organizational learning • Employee involvement and poka-yoke (error proofing) • Kaizen – continuous improvement • Training

  3. Sources of Instability • Quality problems with incoming parts • Problems with machines, jigs • Parts shortages • Waiting for a part • Safety problems

  4. Elements of Standard Work • Takt time • Work sequence • In-process stock • Goal is to synchronous Takt time and cycle time

  5. Elements of Standard Work • Work sequence • Pick up part • Walk to machine • Place part on machine • Machine process part • Take part to next machine

  6. Elements of Standard Work • In-process stock • Minimum number of unfinished parts required for operator to complete the process without standing in front of a machine • Quality checks require additional in-process • Temperatures must fall for next operation (more) • Machinery cycles automatically (more)

  7. Production Capacity Chart Basic Operation Time Tool Changes Time To comp. Inter changes Mach Time Man Time Time to change Name No M/C Capacity 1 Machine face 3 MIL 1764 25 28 100 60 965

  8. Standard Work Table

  9. Standard Work Chart

  10. Job Element Sheets

  11. Line balancing time 1 2 3 4 5 6 Station time 1 2 3 4 5 6 Station

  12. Overall vs Individual Efficiency • Goldratt – Drum, Buffer, Rope • Identify bottlenecks • Exploit bottlenecks • Elevate bottlenecks • Baseball cap factory

  13. Standardized Work and Kaizen • Guidelines for economy of motion (IE 311, 321) • Guidelines for layout • Guidelines for tools/jigs

  14. Standardized Work and Kaizen • Guidelines for economy of motion (IE 311, 321) • Hand movements symmetrical and current • Light work • Done in a strong circle • Keep hands free • Guidelines for layout • Guidelines for tools/jigs

  15. Standardized Work and Kaizen • Guidelines for economy of motion (IE 311, 321) • Guidelines for layout (IE 471, 475) • Use gravity • Horizontal vs vertical movement • Place tools and materials for easy access • U-cells • Guidelines for tools/jigs

  16. Standardized Work and Kaizen • Guidelines for economy of motion (IE 311, 321) • Guidelines for layout (IE 471, 475) • Guidelines for tools/jigs (IE 475) • Eliminate manual holding • Use ergonomic tools • Combine tools where possible

  17. Common Layouts • Job Shop • Cells • Assembly Line • Strategies • Chase • Level • Mixed

More Related