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Chair Comments — July 2007Greetings, This week we celebrate the Fourth of July, remembering the signing of the Declaration of Independence. This example of putting words to paper and sharing them with a wider audience made me think of our chapter mission statement. I began the year emphasizing the chapter mission statement at the officer installation dinner. We are halfway through the year and I feel it important to share with the chapter. These are the words and ideas we put to paper to share with the community our mission as a chapter. Even if you are not active in the day to day operation of the chapter, you represent the chapter and SME. I encourage you to review the mission statement and think how you can contribute to and influence manufacturing in the Pacific Northwest. SME Seattle Chapter 039 Mission StatementTo serve its members, manufacturing industry, and manufacturing education, SME Chapter 039 shall be a valuable source of communication, networking, and dissemination of manufacturing technology for the Pacific Northwest manufacturing community. To do this, it will:
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Volunteer OpportunitiesOur chapter is engaged with a number of local universities and technical colleges in the Pacific Northwest. We have an immediate opportunity for a senior chapter member to liaise with and provide SME leadership to two of our local technical schools, Everett Community College and Lake Washington Technical College. Both of these schools have strong manufacturing-related curricula and are engaged with SME. If you live in the north end or the east side, this is a great opportunity to get involved making a difference in manufacturing. Please contact our Vice Chair – Student Chapter Liaison, Tim Bond, at tim.bond@boeing.com to learn more and sign up. SME Technical PapersRemember that the thousands of SME technical papers are available to members FREE by downloading the Adobe Acrobat version of the technical paper from the SME national site. Go to the National Website to review the articles. Willy Geary Named Director of Boeing WinnipegChapter member (and former chapter chair and national president) Willy Geary has been named Director of Boeing Winnipeg, which is the largest components supplier to Boeing Commercial Airplanes. Congratulations and good luck Willy! More info can be found here. Web Site UpdatesOur web site team has been hard at work making improvements to the chapter web site. Please take a few minutes to visit the site. It is at http://chapters.sme.org/039/index.html SME Chapter 039 June EventI was disappointed to be out of town on travel for the June event, which was a tour of the Boeing Rapid Prototyping Lab in Seattle. I received very positive feedback on the event; that it was very interesting and educational. A big thank you to Vice Chair of Activities, Carlos Chaves, for organizing the event and the Boeing Rapid Prototyping Lab personnel for hosting us. |
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If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, please call me or e-mail me as noted below. I, or one of the chapter board members, will endeavor to reply in a timely manner. Thank you, Jeff Arnold, jeffrey.j.arnold@boeing.com 253-657-2142 EditorialI do not want to discuss politics, religion, sports or music in these editorials. While they are all noble and worthwhile discussion topics, there are already several forums for those discussions to take place. I would rather discuss technology and our SME membership here. To begin with, I would like to cover the benefits of joining a professional society. There are many types of professional societies that people may join. There are societies based on the region of the country you are in, your gender, your ethnic background, your educational background, and the job you are employed in. It is evident that our membership joined either because it related to their job or their education. As a result we have a more diverse membership potential than the "diverse" societies that limit their membership to a race or gender. Our diversity may be a part of the reason that so many want to join us. Membership, especially active membership, in a Professional Society also tends to look good on a résumé. I realize that is a reason that many join. I hope that is not the reason that people retain their memberships. The heart of our Society, however is the educational opportunities it provides our membership with. The all of our conferences are centered around educating our membership. Our National website states: "The Society of Manufacturing Engineers is dedicated to bringing people and information together to advance manufacturing knowledge." Our manufacturing knowledge is enhanced via tours of facilities, sharing our knowledge with one another verbally, and in the written form (especially in our bulletins, Technical Papers, Technical Quarterlies, and SME's other periodicals.) I hope that we all take the time to not only learn from one another, but to also share the knowledge we have gained. |
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![]() Technology and Information: A Key SME Strategic Goal…and Key Member BenefitIn SME Strategic Plan 2010, Goal 1 focuses on the critical issues of technology and information. Our roadmap plan states that, "SME will be the manufacturing technology information resource for people and companies throughout the manufacturing supply chain." Are you using your SME membership to stay on top of what's new and what's next in technologies that impact your organization? In addition to great chapter events close to home, you can also find helpful information through the SME Technical Community Network. The communities and their niche-specific tech groups are an outstanding resource that connects you with other individuals in manufacturing who are solving problems like yours every day. You can learn and share from them via online forums, at SME events, webinars and teleconferences, and at the communities' Web |
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pages. It's free to add communities to your SME membership, and you can go online 24/7 to update your membership record to add or change communities and tech groups anytime you'd like. Your membership also grants you complete access to download the Society's nearly 17,000 technical papers, and to read Manufacturing Engineering magazine, online tech quarterlies and journals. You can also watch a full-length video at ME-TV for free on the SME Web site each month, view sample clips of other videos, read sample chapters of SME books, and enlist the research assistance of the SME Librarian. Get started at www.sme.org. Chapter Officers:Elected OfficersChair: Jeff Arnold, CMfgE Appointed OfficersMembership: John Urbina |
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Web TeamContent & Administrator: Christopher Hansen, CMfgT Chapter HistoryIn celebrating our 75th Anniversary, we will be running ads from former Bulletins for free. The advertisement at the top of this page was run in September 2001. The advertisement has been reformatted to fit this style. Check them out, support them, and let them know that you read their advertisement in the SME Bulletin! If you have an old advertisement that you would like to see reprinted, send a copy to your Bulletin Editor! Upcoming EventsChapter EventEnjoy your summer!No Official chapter Events in July or August. If you have suggestions, requests, would like to host an event, or if you currently have an event that you think would benefit the Chapter, let us know. |
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Long Time MembersEach month, we want to recognize those who have reached one of the five year mile markers in their time with SME. This month, we had the following: 10 years Jeffrey L Lantrip We appreciate all of the great members who have made this society what it is today! Thank you! Title: Tolerance Allocation Methods for Designers, 1999Author:
Kenneth W. Chase
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Tolerance analysis tools provide a quantitative basis for design for manufacture decisions, resulting in shorter product development time and increased quality. There is probably no other design improvement effort which can yield greater benefits for less cost than the careful analysis and assignment of tolerances. The full article is available for download from BYU's website. BYU also has some software that is free for download and use. It can be found at: http://adcats.et.byu.edu/ adcatstolerancingspreadsheets.php Continuous Processes Can Be LeanAlthough developed for use in producing discrete parts, lean manufacturing and six sigma can also be applied to continuous-process manufacturingSiewMun Ha To order a hardcopy reproduction of this article, click here. To purchase digital reprints or reproduction licenses, please contact the resource center at service@sme.org or call (800) 733-4763. Process manufacturing is fundamentally different from discrete manufacturing: material flows in a continuous stream in the former, while parts move in discrete batches in the latter. The breadth of work on process improvement in discrete manufacturing is vast. And it seems very logical to apply popular existing methodologies tailored to discrete manufacturing, unaltered, to the process-manufacturing industries. This approach, however, is akin to fitting square pegs into round holes. A better approach is to adapt lean techniques developed for use in discrete production within a new process improvement framework for process manufacturing. The new framework identifies the various forms of waste in the process-manufacturing value stream, and manages the wastes with the appropriate concepts and tools. |
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The two most popular process-improvement methodologies in use today—lean manufacturing and six sigma—originated at Toyota and Motorola, respectively. These pioneering companies were discrete manufacturers, and the subsequent evolution and development of the two methodologies has focused mostly on improvements in discrete manufacturing. Much less development work has been carried out on applications of lean and six sigma to process manufacturing. ![]() How is process manufacturing critically different from discrete manufacturing, and why do the differences matter to the process-improvement approach? The key characteristic of process manufacturing that distinguishes it from discrete manufacturing is material movement. In this type of manufacturing, material is processed continuously through a series of machines from raw material to final product. It flows in a continuous stream from one machine to the next, without periods of stopping and waiting in between. Some examples would be iron-ore processing, petrochemical refining, paper manufacturing, and sugar refining. In contrast, the fundamental characteristic of discrete manufacturing is that material and parts move in discrete batches between machines, with the very real possibility of work-in-process (WIP) buildup between processing steps. Lean manufacturing and six sigma each has a central focus that has been the basis for its structure and tools. For lean manufacturing, it's the delivery of value to the customer through the elimination of waste, where waste is defined as anything that is non-value-added from the customer's perspective. In the case of six sigma, the central focus is the elimination of defects, where a defect is defined as a part or service that does not conform to the customer's specifications. How do these concepts apply to process manufacturing, when you consider its differences with discrete manufacturing? Lean manufacturing defines seven types of waste that make a production system "un-lean" and inefficient at delivering value to the customer. These are: |
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The first four types of wastes relate to a lack of material flow in the lean sense, a major problem at many discrete manufacturers. Here, parts and material are processed, transported, and wait in large batches, instead of moving smoothly in a one-piece flow from raw material to finished product. In process manufacturing, however, the very nature of the process dictates that the material already flows (literally!) from one machine to the next. Hence, the lean ideal of flow occurs by default. Also, there is typically little or no WIP between machines in process manufacturing. What WIP that exists tends to be of the order of hours of production rather than days or weeks of production, as is usually the case with discrete manufacturing. As a result, over-production, inventory, and waiting are either nonissues or only minor issues in process manufacturing. If the plant is suboptimally laid out, transportation is potentially an issue in process manufacturing, as material must be moved over greater distances than absolutely necessary. Suboptimal transportation increases the extent and complexity of the conveyance system (e.g. pipes, conveyors), which then requires increased investment and maintenance—waste. In reality, however, the nature of the machinery in process plants is such that any movement of machines to optimize material flow is usually difficult and expensive, and is consequently a nonstarter in most process-improvement efforts. Movement waste is also less relevant to process manufacturing. Operators in these plants typically monitor automated machinery, and even if they have to move from one piece of equipment to |
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the next, that movement usually does not have an adverse impact on the ability of the equipment to continue processing the material. In discrete manufacturing, on the other hand, operator involvement is required to process a part on a machine. The last two types of waste—defects and
over-processing—exist in process manufacturing just as they do in discrete
manufacturing. Defects in process manufacturing result in the production
of material that does not meet the specifications of the downstream
internal/external customer. In iron-ore processing, for example, the
iron-containing rock must be crushed to a certain size before further
processing can begin to separate the iron from impurities. If the rock is
not crushed to the specified size, then the downstream separation process
suffers from degraded performance. Over-processing occurs Six sigma's focus on defect reduction/elimination aligns well with certain types of waste that exist in process manufacturing. It is, however, not the complete solution. While the six-sigma tool set is very powerful and works well to optimize process performance with respect to quality, throughput, and efficiency, the methodology fails to address other root causes of waste in process manufacturing. The fully successful process-improvement effort thus takes advantage of a complete armament of techniques, and applies the ones best-suited to achieving the desired results. What might some of these root causes be? To answer that question, it's instructive to analyze the process-improvement opportunities in process-manufacturing from first principles, rather than trying to force-fit the opportunities into the structure of lean manufacturing and/or six sigma. We do so by |
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visualizing a perfect process-manufacturing value stream, and then identify improvement opportunities by mapping the gaps between this perfect value stream and its real-world counterpart. What would such a perfect value stream look like? The perfect process value stream is one where all the machines are:
With these characteristics, the perfect value stream produces good-quality product reliably, efficiently, and in sufficient quantity, at the individual machine level as well as for the value stream as a whole. A suboptimal condition with respect to each of these four ideal characteristics constitutes a type of waste. Because the perfect value stream is an idealization, all real-world process-manufacturing value streams will contain one or more of these wastes, representing targets of opportunity for any process-improvement effort. The root causes of these wastes may be identified by means of fish-bone (Ishikawa) diagrams. A putative first-level fish bone for machine capability is shown in the illustration on page 108. Ishikawa diagrams are not meant to be a complete and exhaustive identification of all causes of waste, but rather a starting point for further investigation. You can use such diagrams as "straw models" to identify the root causes of wastes in your specific value stream. As befits a root-cause analysis, each of the first-level causes under Man, Machine, Environment, Method, and Material may be deconstructed, as appropriate, into successively higher-level causes, until the root cause has been found. At that point, the appropriate methodology/tool can be applied to address it. While the causes of process-manufacturing waste are many and varied, a few occur with regularity across all or most of the four categories of |
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waste tracked in Ishikawa diagrams. First and foremost is mechanical condition. This refers to machines that are at a suboptimal state of maintenance, a very common condition at many process plants. Machines in poor mechanical condition have poor availability, produce poor-quality product in inadequate quantities, and operate inefficiently. In short, they operate wastefully! A maintenance kaizen event is the appropriate process-improvement tool to return the machine to an optimum mechanical condition. To sustain the improvement, a long-term maintenance program such as Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) must be installed. A second major cause of waste is suboptimal operation. Process manufacturing typically involves a combination of physical parameters such as temperature, pressure, density, flow rate, moisture level, and chemical concentration that are set at the machine to process the material. If the settings of these physical parameters are suboptimal, then the machine also operates suboptimally in terms of throughput, quality, and efficiency. To fix this problem, we need to identify the optimum settings at which to run the machine. Optimization problems of this nature are ideally solved using the six-sigma methodology and tool set, employing designed experimentation to characterize the behavior of the machine with respect to its settings. Design and technology are another two major causes of waste. It's not uncommon to find machines at brownfield process plants that have been in use for many years, if not decades, that are obsolete with regard to both design and technology. Such obsolete machines operate wastefully in terms of availability, quality, throughput, and efficiency, much like a machine that is in poor mechanical condition. Improving machine design/technology is an engineering problem requiring technical analysis and designed experimentation. In addition to the characteristic of material flow, another distinction between discrete and process manufacturing is that changeovers are often not an issue in the latter, as most production lines only produce one type of product. Availability can still be adversely affected, however, by long setup times after a machine has been taken down for maintenance. In this case, quick changeover techniques such as Single Minute Exchange of Die |
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If the overall management objective is to increase throughput, then the Theory of Constraints (TOC) can be a useful device to focus and guide the process-improvement effort. Briefly put, TOC posits that in any production system, at any one time, there usually exists only one constraint that limits the overall system throughput. We increase overall throughput by improving the performance of the constraint. Improvements elsewhere make no difference. As the existing constraint is lifted, a new constraint appears at another location, and we repeat the process to achieve additional throughput improvements. TOC enables us to focus our scarce resources on the critical part of the value stream that will make a difference, instead of diluting our efforts where they will not. With regard to process improvement, process manufacturing differs from discrete manufacturing in critical ways. Applying discrete-manufacturing process-improvement methodologies without modification results in disconnects and gaps in the improvement effort. Instead of blindly applying methodologies in ways that are more suited to discrete manufacturing, a more rewarding approach is to realign them to a framework that accounts for the unique nature of process manufacturing, identifies the specific wastes, and applies the appropriate tools to tackle them. To order a hardcopy reproduction of this article, click here. To purchase digital reprints or reproduction licenses, please contact the resource center at service@sme.org or call (800) 733-4763. |
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