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Chapter 3: Operation Analysis

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Worker pours milk into stainless steel beaker, Steams milk, pours into cup. Runs out of milk must pour and steam more while customer waits impatiently. Solution: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 3: Operation Analysis


1
Chapter 3 Operation Analysis
  • Human Factors
  • Prof. Hayes

2
If Methods Engineering Focuses Primarily on
improving productivity though (re)design of
Motivation Incentives/rewards
Organizational structure
Work Process
Work operations
Tools (Products)
Work environment
3
Then Operations Analysis Focuses Primarily on
improving productivity though (re)design of
Motivation Incentives/rewards
Organizational structure
Work Process
Work operations
Tools (Products)
Work environment
4
The 9 Primary Approaches to Operation Analysis
  • Operation Purpose
  • Part Design
  • Tolerances and Specs
  • Material
  • Manufacturing Sequence and Process
  • Setup and Tools
  • Material Handling
  • Plant Layout
  • Work Design

Also consider management and reward changes
5
Simultaneously consider many ways of making
improvements!
6
1. Operation Purpose
  • Ask
  • Does this operation serve a useful purpose?
  • Is this operation really needed?
  • Try to
  • Eliminate operations
  • Combine operations
  • As many as 25 of operations in American Industry
    can be eliminated.

7
Example 1 Operation Elimination
  • Many stores have dropped the requirement that
    customers sign their credit slip for small
    totals less than 15 - 50.
  • This makes the payment transaction very fast!
  • E.g. in coffee shop study,
  • Average payment transaction time 27 sec

8
Example 2 Operation Elimination Outsource
operations
  • Ask Can a supplier an operation more
    economically than we can in-house?
  • Operation pack ball bearings in grease
  • Modification purchase sealed bearings from
    supplier.

9
Example 3 Operation Elimination Eliminate re-work
  • Coffee shop worker
  • Worker pours milk into stainless steel beaker,
  • Steams milk, pours into cup.
  • Runs out of milk must pour and steam more while
    customer waits impatiently.
  • Solution
  • Add measuring lines to inside of beaker so worker
    does not have to estimate how much milk to pour.

10
2. Part DesignDesign for manufacturing and
life-cycle
  • Reduce parts simplify designs
  • Reduce processing operations
  • Utilize better material
  • Loosen tolerances where possible
  • Design for manufacturing choose an easy to
    manufacture shape over a difficult one.

11
Minimum cost design
  • It helps designers if they understand processes
    such as casting, molding and punching, bending,
    etc.
  • Example instead of
  • Four bends in sheet metal to make part,
  • Make lower cost extrusion with 4 bends already in
    it.
  • This type of thinking is called
  • Design for Manufacturing

12
3. Tolerances and specifications
  • Designers tend to incorporate tolerances that are
    more rigid than necessary
  • Why? To be extra sure that product will function
    in all situations.
  • It is perceived to reduce risk, but it can add
    much unnecessary cost,
  • Need to consider risk/cost trade-off.
  • Taguchi (86) methods develop quality products and
    reduce cost.

13
4. Material
  • Incorporate better, more economical material in
    designs
  • Less expensive
  • Easier to process
  • Use materials more economically
  • Use supplies and tools more economically,
  • Standardize materials
  • Find best vendor price, stock. Can achieve 10
    to 15 reductions by shopping around, sometimes
    every year.

14
Example New material
  • Substitute glass tubing for Micarta spacer bar in
    transformer. (Micarta is a glass cloth, epoxy
    resin laminate material)
  • ? less expensive and better cooling
  • Replace stamped gear with plastic gear in
    assembly.
  • ? saved 0.13 per unit, 10,000 per year.
  • Keiretsu (Japanese term) interlocking
    relationship between manufacturers and suppliers.

15
5. Manufacturing Sequence and Tools
  • Re-sequence operations
  • Group operations that can share common fixturing
  • Mechanize manual operations where economically
    feasible (see section on setup)
  • Use more efficient facilities (see section on
    layout) Example, substitute Super automatic
    cappuccino machines for old style.
  • Manufacture near-net shape.
  • Use Robots (where economically feasible usually
    for long product runs, small product variability)

16
Example re-sequencing
  • Original sequence
  • Paint part 1
  • Paint part 2
  • Paint part 3
  • Paint part 4
  • Rivet parts together
  • New sequence
  • Rivet parts together
  • Paint one assembly

17
6. Setup, Tools and Fixtures
  • Carefully consider economic trade-offs
  • Will the setup, fixtures, or tools be used enough
    to justify their expense?
  • Prevalent mistake of tool makers and planners
  • Too much specialized tooling and fixturing

18
Example Tooling
  • Good choice Tooling that saves 10 on each job
    and is used frequently.
  • Poor choice Tooling that saves 90 on each job
    but is used only twice a year. (Will not recover
    expense of creating and storing tooling).

19
7. Material Handling
  • The best way to handle material is NOT to handle
    it.
  • Moving, storing, positioning, tracking.
  • Insuring that materials get where they need to be
    when they are needed.
  • Material Handling Institute survey says 35 to 85
    of the cost of getting a product to market is
    associated with material handling.

20
Better material handling
  • Reduces cost, time
  • Increases safety, health and well being of
    workers
  • 40 of plant accidents happen during material
    handling
  • 25 are caused by lifting and shifting material

21
Approach to reducing material handling time
  • Reduce time spent picking up material
  • Use mechanized of automated equipment (where
    economically feasible)
  • Make better use of existing handling facilities
  • Handle material with greater care
  • Consider bar coding

22
8. Plant Layout
  • Poor layout can result in major costs through
    increased travel time, increased material
    handling, etc.
  • Two types of layouts for plants
  • Product layout machines placed in the order
    used in the manufacturing process.
  • Advantage reduces travel time
  • Process layout machines grouped by type e.g.
    all lathes together, all drill presses together,
    etc.
  • Advantage makes training easier.
  • Later we will discuss Muthers Systematic Layout
    Process (SLP).

23
9. Work Design
  • Eliminate operations,
  • Re-sequence, re-design operations
  • Many of our remaining chapters focus on many
    different types of work design!

24
Muthers (1973) Systematic Layout Process (SLP)
  • Goal identify how to rearrange space to make it
    more effective for a task.
  • Chart out relationships between areas based on
    magnitude of material handling,
  • Establish space requirements,
  • Make activity relationship diagrams
  • Space relationship layout
  • Evaluate alternative layouts
  • Select best layout, plan installation.

25
Decision Matrices
A performance parameter is whatever is important
to the decision maker in the
situation, Goodness score for each option i is
S (importance weight j performance score i j)
Performance Parameters
Performance score, where 4 best, -1
unacceptable
26
6. Select the best layout for your purposes
  • Choose the Layout with the highest score from
    your decision matrices

88
89
92
Best!
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