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LSM733-PRODUCTION OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT By: OSMAN BIN SAIF LECTURE 30 1
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Summary of last Session CHAPTER : CAPACITY AND CONSTRAINT MANAGEMENT Capacity Design and Effective Capacity Capacity and Strategy Capacity Considerations Managing Demand Demand and Capacity Management in the Service Sector 2
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Summary of last Session(Contd.) Bottleneck Analysis and Theory of Constraints Process Times for Stations, Systems, and Cycles Theory of Constraints Bottleneck Management Break-Even Analysis Single-Product Case 3
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Summary of last Session (Contd.) Applying Expected Monetary Value to Capacity Decisions 4
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Agenda for this Session Additional Chapter: Quality Control Quality / Quality Control Phases of Quality Assurance Inspection Statistical Control Control charts SPC Errors 5
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Agenda for this Session (Contd.) Control Charts for Variables – Mean control charts – Range control charts Counting Runs Process capability 6
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ADDITIONAL CHAPTER: QUALITY CONTROL 7
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What is Quality ? In manufacturing, a measure of excellence or a state of being free from defects, deficiencies and significant variations. It is brought about by strict and consistent commitment to certain standards that achieve uniformity of a product in order to satisfy specific customer or user requirements. ISO 8402-1986 standard defines quality as "the totality of features and characteristics of a product or service that bears its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs." 8
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What is Quality Control ? Quality control (QC) is a procedure or set of procedures intended to ensure that a manufactured product or performed service adheres to a defined set of quality criteria or meets the requirements of the client or customer. 9
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What is Quality Assurance ? QC is similar to, but not identical with, quality assurance (QA). QA is defined as a procedure or set of procedures intended to ensure that a product or service under development (before work is complete, as opposed to afterwards) meets specified requirements. QA is sometimes expressed together with QC as a single expression, quality assurance and control (QA/QC).QA 10
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Phases of Quality Assurance Acceptance sampling Process control Continuous improvement Inspection of lots before/after production Inspection and corrective action during production Quality built into the process The least progressive The most progressive 11
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Inspection How Much/How Often Where/When Centralized vs. On-site InputsTransformationOutputs Acceptance sampling Process control Acceptance sampling 12
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Cost Optimal Amount of Inspection Inspection Costs Cost of inspection Cost of passing defectives Total Cost 13
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Where to Inspect in the Process Raw materials and purchased parts Finished products Before a costly operation Before an irreversible process Before a covering process 14
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Examples of Inspection Points 15
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Statistical Process Control: Statistical evaluation of the output of a process during production Quality of Conformance: A product or service conforms to specifications Statistical Control 16
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Control Chart – Purpose: to monitor process output to see if it is random – A time ordered plot representative sample statistics obtained from an on going process (e.g. sample means) – Upper and lower control limits define the range of acceptable variation 17
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Control Chart 0123456789101112131415 UCL LCL Sample number Mean Out of control Normal variation due to chance Abnormal variation due to assignable sources 18
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Statistical Process Control The essence of statistical process control is to assure that the output of a process is random so that future output will be random. 19
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Statistical Process Control The Control Process – Define – Measure – Compare – Evaluate – Correct – Monitor results 20
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Statistical Process Control Variations and Control – Random variation: Natural variations in the output of a process, created by countless minor factors – Assignable variation: A variation whose source can be identified 21
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Sampling Distribution Sampling distribution Process distribution Mean 22
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Normal Distribution Mean 95.44% 99.74% Standard deviation 23
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Control Limits Sampling distribution Process distribution Mean Lower control limit Upper control limit 24
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SPC Errors Type I error – Concluding a process is not in control when it actually is. Type II error – Concluding a process is in control when it is not. 25
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10-26 Type I and Type II Errors In controlOut of control In controlNo ErrorType I error (producers risk) Out of control Type II Error (consumers risk) No error
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Type I Error Mean LCLUCL /2 Probability of Type I error 27
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Observations from Sample Distribution Sample number UCL LCL 1234 28
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Control Charts for Variables Mean control charts – Used to monitor the central tendency of a process. – X bar charts Range control charts – Used to monitor the process dispersion – R charts Variables generate data that are measured. 29
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Mean and Range Charts UCL LCL UCL LCL R-chart x-Chart Detects shift Does not detect shift (process mean is shifting upward) Sampling Distribution 30
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x-Chart UCL Does not reveal increase Mean and Range Charts UCL LCL R-chart Reveals increase (process variability is increasing) Sampling Distribution 31
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Control Chart for Attributes p-Chart - Control chart used to monitor the proportion of defectives in a process c-Chart - Control chart used to monitor the number of defects per unit Attributes generate data that are counted. 32
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Use of p-Charts When observations can be placed into two categories. – Good or bad – Pass or fail – Operate or don’t operate When the data consists of multiple samples of several observations each 33
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Use of c-Charts Use only when the number of occurrences per unit of measure can be counted; non- occurrences cannot be counted. – Scratches, chips, dents, or errors per item – Cracks or faults per unit of distance – Breaks or Tears per unit of area – Bacteria or pollutants per unit of volume – Calls, complaints, failures per unit of time 34
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Use of Control Charts At what point in the process to use control charts What size samples to take What type of control chart to use – Variables – Attributes 35
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Run Tests Run test – a test for randomness Any sort of pattern in the data would suggest a non-random process All points are within the control limits - the process may not be random 36
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Nonrandom Patterns in Control charts Trend Cycles Bias Mean shift Too much dispersion 37
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Counting Above/Below Median Runs(7 runs) Counting Up/Down Runs(8 runs) U U D U D U D U U D B A A B A B B B A A B Counting Runs 38
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NonRandom Variation Managers should have response plans to investigate cause May be false alarm (Type I error) May be assignable variation 39
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Tolerances or specifications – Range of acceptable values established by engineering design or customer requirements Process variability – Natural variability in a process Process capability – Process variability relative to specification Process Capability 40
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Process Capability Lower Specification Upper Specification A. Process variability matches specifications Lower Specification Upper Specification B. Process variability well within specifications Lower Specification Upper Specification C. Process variability exceeds specifications 41
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Process mean Lower specification Upper specification 1350 ppm 1.7 ppm +/- 3 Sigma +/- 6 Sigma 3 Sigma and 6 Sigma Quality 42
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Improving Process Capability Simplify Standardize Mistake-proof Upgrade equipment Automate 43
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Taguchi Loss Function Cost Target Lower spec Upper spec Traditional cost function Taguchi cost function 44
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Summary of the Session Additional Chapter: Quality Control Quality / Quality Control Phases of Quality Assurance Inspection Statistical Control Control charts SPC Errors 45
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Summary of the Session (Contd.) Control Charts for Variables – Mean control charts – Range control charts Counting Runs Process capability 46
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THANK YOU 47
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