Ram Report
Ram Report
Ram Report
Lean Manufacturing
Plan
Ryan Henderson
EMGT 594
Fall 2006
Research Paper
This paper was created to put one of my greatest accomplishments in my career on paper
to share with anyone that is encountering a similar scenario, wants to learn more about
lean or that is extremely board and has run out of reading material.
I added lots of opinions from lessons learned from my project experience. I have also
included valuable history on lean as well as comparisons of past manufacturing theories.
The research for this topic was fun. Lean Manufacturing is a passion of mine that I
excelled at and had a great time executing everyday with my previous job.
Unfortunately, in my current position as an Account executive for a Valve and
instrumentation representative company, I do not have the opportunity to create and
improve manufacturing processes as I did in my previous positions. However, I hope to
get the opportunity to implement the lean tools and resources again in a future position.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. Research Problem
2. Objective
1. Purpose of Research
3. Background
1. Definition of Lean Manufacturing
9-12
13-14
14-17
4. Customer Focus
17-19
5. Lean = Perfection
19-20
20-26
7. Focusing on Waste
26-35
4. Lean Tools
1.
Six Sigma
2.
Kaizen
36
36-37
3.
37
4.
Spaghetti Diagram
37-38
5.
Set up reduction
38
6.
JIT
38
7.
Takt Time
38
8.
38
9.
5-S
39
39-40
41-42
7. Case Study
43-52
8. Conclusion
53-55
9. Definitions
56-61
10. References
62
23
24-25
53
ANNEX I
5-S IMPLEMENTATION
1. INTRODUCTION
64-68
2. LITERATURE REVIEW
69-74
74-76
4. EVALUATION OF METHODOLGY
76
5. CONCLUSIONS
76-79
6. REFERENCES
79
Research Problem
Objective
The purpose of this research is to provide the reader with a thorough
definition, back ground and implementation plan for lean
manufacturing in an established manufacturing environment.
The layout of the paper will allow the reader the ability to fully
Background
Lean Manufacturing is a system that uses a minimal amount of
resources to produce a high volume of high quality products with some
variety. (Stevenson)
Lean Manufacturing
Customer(s)
Assembly
Process
Additional Process
(if required)
Materials
of the Lean manufacturing Concept. After World War II, Japan was
literally non existent, yet the Toyota Motor Co. planned to extend the
capacity of their automatic loom company by producing automobiles.
After visiting various automobile plants in the United States, Toyota
realized that they lacked the capacity to compete head-to-head with
established companies like Ford and GM. Toyota also realized that the
vulnerability of the Western style manufacturing system (Mass
Production) was that it worked best when only one type of model was
manufactured at a time, with no modifications and with absolutely no
setbacks with in the operation lines (i.e. machine breakdowns or
maintenance related issues, power outages, tooling issues, etc..) during
production.
In 1956, Taiichi Ohno visited the United States and came across an
unusual discovery that was ultimately the answer that Toyota Motor
10
Co. was looking for. The surprising issue was that he did not find the
answer in a manufacturing plant. He found his answer in an American
grocery store. At the time, Japan did not have many grocery stores and
Taiichi Ohno was quite impressed with how American customers chose
when and where, how many, and what type of goods they wanted in
American grocery stores. Immediately, Taiichi knew that the only way
that Toyota could compete with the large mass production systems of
the US was to transform the Toyota automobile plants existing
manufacturing system into a process which offered the same type of
choices and efficiency available to their customers as the American
grocery stores were currently offering.
11
Some of the key factors in becoming successful when using the lean
concept are to have skilled/cross trained workers and flexible
equipment. In a lean environment, workers must be capable of
executing a variety of different tasks. They are also required to think
on their own and innovate ways of fixing and preventing defective parts
from occurring. Your equipment must have the capability to machine a
variety of different parts. It is vital to the success of a Lean
Manufacturing system that the machinery in that system has the
flexibility to quickly adapt to any type of catastrophic machine loss,
maintenance downtime, or a high volume of unusual parts, which were
driven by quick turn around customer orders.
12
14
The next two steps is where the Manufacturing (ME) or Industrial (IE)
Engineering department plays the most critical and important role of
the entire organizations transformation to the Lean System. The
ME/IE department will be the designers, creators and implementers for
any organization that is planning on making the transition to the Lean
system. In most organizations the ME/IE department normally creates
the work and production orders, trouble shoots tooling or machine
issues, and assists the production personnel with whatever issues they
might encounter in the production facility. By understanding the
routine activities throughout the entire production facility, the ME/IE
department will understand the material flow and needs of the
production supervisors and the personnel in the production facility
throughout the entire transition to the Lean Manufacturing System.
The second step is to plot out the flow of material throughout the
manufacturing facility using diagrams and PC automated drawing aids.
Again, this step will more than likely be executed by the organizations
ME/IE department. By plotting out the material flow, companies can
see areas that need improvement by the way that they transport material
15
to and from work centers and they will also be able to identify errors in
their current processes. The diagrams will also assist the organization
with identifying the non-value-added activities that must be removed or
improved.
The fourth and final step is continuous improvement. This is the most
difficult step throughout the Lean Manufacturing transition. It is a step
that must involve the entire organization in order for the Lean
Manufacturing transition to be successful. The transition to a lean
16
CUSTOMER FOCUS
An organization which operates under the lean manufacturing system
focuses more on its customers than it does on running machines faster,
in order to absorb unwanted labor and overhead expenses. In a properly
17
LEAN = PERFECTION
The true concept of lean production is pushing an organization to strive
for manufacturing perfection. What is manufacturing perfection?
Manufacturing perfection is when an organization can produce its
products with zero manufacturing defects, maintain a low inventory
system, consume little overhead and indirect labor costs, have zero
19
maintenance or machine issues, zero safety related issues and meet all
of the customers requirements and delivery times on every order that
the organization receives.
21
22
Mass Production
Objective: Maximize Economies of Scale
Materials
Additional
Process(es)
Storage
Receivin
g
Warehou
se
Process
Materials
Storage
Rework
Assembly
Shipping
Warehou
se
Ship
23
24
Business Strategy
Leadership
Hierarchical structures that encourage following orders and
Flat structures that encourage initiative and encourage the
discourage the flow of vital information that highlights defects,
flow of vital information that highlights defects, operator
Organization
External Relations
Based on price
Information Management
labor strife
Cultural
Production
Maintenance
Engineering
25
26
MANUFACTURING METHODS:
LEAN PRODUCTION
Products manufactured to
facility
Fill customer orders (immediate shipments)
Weeks/months
Hours/days
operations
By product flow, using cells or lines for product
Quality is assured
families
100% at the production source
Worker empowerment is
implementing improvements
Inventory levels are High large warehouse of finished goods, and central storeroom Low small amounts between operations, ship often
Inventory turns are
schedules is
Manufacturing costs are
27
FOCUSING ON WASTE
The main focus of a properly implemented Lean Manufacturing system
is to eliminate waste in every area of production, including customer
relations, product design, supplier relations, and operations
management. Waste" is anything that the customer does not pay for.
The goal of the Lean Manufacturing system is to reduce the amount of
human effort, inventory, time to develop new and existing products,
and floor space. These goals are set in order to transform the
organization in to a facility that has the capability to be highly
responsive to customer demand while continuing to produce high
quality products in the most efficient and economical manner possible.
28
Misuse of automation
Un-level scheduling
Over engineered
Redundant inspections
29
Waiting time and Transportation wastes are both problems that can
seriously affect the productivity and product throughput time of a
30
31
Lack of communications
Redundant approvals
Weak management
6. Product design
7. Customer needs not understood
8. Underutilizing personnel
9. Personnel not willing to change, politics, the business culture
10. Poor hiring practices
11. Low or no investment in training
12. Under paid workers, high turnover strategy for personnel
Nearly every type of waste in the production process can fit into at least
one of these categories. Organizations that understand the concept of
Lean manufacturing view waste as the main variance, which
significantly limits business performance and threatens success unless
it is persistently eliminated over time. Lean manufacturing is an
approach that eliminates waste by reducing costs in the overall
production process, in operations within that process, and in the
utilization of direct labor.
36
LEAN Tools
1. Six Sigma (Lean Sigma) the objective of Six Sigma is a
measurement-based strategy that focuses on process
improvement and variation reduction through successful Six
Sigma Improvement projects. These projects are executed
through 5 principles called DMAIC.
1. Define
2. Measure
3. Analyze
4. Improve
5. Control
2. Kaizen event is a meeting that is coordinated to bring together
several functional areas of a Manufacturing facility in order to
design a concept to fix a non-value-added operation that is
unavoidable.
show every step the part takes until completion in order to help
the lean representative eliminate unnecessary waste within that
process.
5. Set up reduction, decreasing the set up time for each part or
process step.
6. JIT - Just in time inventory is requesting inventory from suppliers
just in time to manufacture the parts for the required delivery
time.
7. Takt time, the rate or time that a completed product is finished
8. Value added vs Non value added times; Value added actions meet
the following criteria:
1) the customer is willing to pay for this activity.
2) It must be done right the first time.
3) The action must somehow change the product or service in
some manner.
39
40
Elimination of waste
Equipment reliability
Continuous flow
Less inventory required throughout the production process, raw material, WIP,
and finished goods
Error proofing
Visual management/5-S
Push decision making and system development down to the "lowest levels"
41
Level production
Quick Changeover
Teamwork
Cross-trained workers
Tie improvements, long term, to key macro level performance targets (i.e.
inventory turns, quality, delivery, overall cost reductions)
The need to execute pilot projects prior to rolling culture out across the
organization
After early gains in operations, share the info across the ENTIRE organization
43
Implementation Plan
In considering the creation of my implementation plan for the Valve
manufacturing facility I considered the following steps in the design of
the plan.
1. Map our (spaghetti diagram) of the entire facility and flow of the
material throughout the plant.
2. Conduct research that consists of interviewing and spending
quality time with the personnel on the shop floor. This step is
extremely important to ensure that the plan is realistic and to
grasp the technical language and actual everyday processes that
are used on the shop floor.
3. Involve the chain of command, Shop Supervisors and key shop
floor personnel through out the process, especially in the final
stages for feedback that will ensure that the plan is realistic from
an operations view as well as a fincial and budgetary view.
4. Involve outside vendors for external input and quotes for
budgetary purposes
5. Complete the plan modify processes, complete machine move
drawings, discuss plan with lean team & involve COC.
44
45
Case Study
STEP 1
I conducted this research experiment while I was in a Lean
Manufacturing Engineering position with a local Oil & Gas Valve
manufacturer. The Manufacturing facility is state of the art, with
central A/C & Heat, and is over 200,000 Square feet in size. The
facility was technologically advanced with 21st Century Processes and
Equipment. The Facility contained over 75 CNC vertical and
horizontal Lathes and Mills.
The mapping process took over 2 months to finalize and piece together
in a package that could be used to create the concept of the future plan.
Spending 6 hours on the shop floor on a daily basis was normal.
Normally, I would spend 4 of the 6 hours per day with the machinist
and welders asking questions, listening to their problems and watching
them execute their daily responsibilities. This is a very tough task
because most of these machinists have been doing their assigned duties
for 10 20 years. They have seen many people come and go and lots
of plans for change implemented and then fail. They are wise beyond
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their years to say the least. The problem persists because the operators
sometimes feel as if you are prying in their business or that you are
observing them only to run to their supervisors critiquing every move.
It was very important to ensure they were comfortable and to
immediately get the point across that you were there to help, not take
their job away. It was a difficult task at times, but it was vital to the
success of the Lean plan.
The last 2 hours of my daily shop time consisted of collecting cycle and
throughput times. This task was also tough and consisted of
clandestine type operations to sneak around and time the operators
during their machine or welding runs. These times were very
important; in order to properly record the data that was needed to create
a successful lean plan.
The balance of my day after the time in the shop consisted of transfer
the data and notes that were recorded to a digital journal posted on my
pc. This daily journal was finally combined, critiqued and finalized in
47
STEP 2
As stated in the initial paragraph of this case study, the facility had
incorporated 21st century processes from previous 6 sigma projects.
Cooper Cameron Corporation implemented a huge 6 sigma initiation
program several years before the Lean concept was initiated. The
processes were excellent and definitely reduced costs and improving
quality. However, all of the processes worked in an individual manor.
They did not overlap and interconnect like processes should work in a
properly designed lean manufacturing plan. The processes
modifications and new designs absorbed the majority of our time and
focus during meetings. Successful processes are the key to a successful
lean plan, and we ensured that our processes were sounds, well thought
out and critiqued.
48
The process modifications were changed and created mainly due to the
machine moves and new machine purchases. There were 8 New
Processes implemented and 35 existing processes modified.
Some of the existing processes were modified due to the production
lines transforming in to a series of cells. By converting the previous
machine layouts in to cells, now instead of moving from one machine
to the next, the operator could perform any where from 3 to 5 tasks all
at one time, once the machines are set in the designed cells and
running.
STEP 3 & 4
There were 25 Shop personnel, 4 office workers, 3 outside contractors
and 1 lean consultant that were involved with the project. The shop
personnel were supervisors, lead men and senior operators. The office
workers consisted of 1 production engineer, Six Sigma Black belt,
Accountant and I. The 2 of the 3 contractors were from the 2 vendors
that were supplying the new machines for us and the 3rd contractor was
supplying us with our new equipment for the assembly and test areas.
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The lean consultant was not a really big help, but he did provide us
with some excellent resources.
STEP 5
The training that was involved was priceless and was an excellent tool
to not only train but to build up motivation and to brainstorm processes
and potential layout plans. Each shop worker had a total of about 40
hours of training over the duration of the initial phase. The meetings
took up about 25 hours of time over the 14 months. The training
sessions consisted of lean, 5-S, JIT inventory, MRO scheduling & 6sigma. Our meetings focused mainly on machine moves, 5-S and
process modifications.
50
STEP 6
After the plan was finally approved by management, an AFE
(Authorization for expenditure) was then required and needed approval
in order to receive the capital funds necessary to pay for moving the
machines, purchasing new machines, part conveyors, rollers, chains,
slings, etc
Once the AFE was created and put into the corporate system for
approval, I had a lot of time on my hands (5 weeks) waiting for the
authorization and budgetary numbers to begin the implementation.
During the waiting period I had a minimum of 2 meetings per week
with the supervisors and 2 specialty selected employees from each
product line. The meetings were held to review the future lean plan, as
well as to strategize what moves should be executed first, which lines
had to be completed the quickest due to importance to the overall
throughput of the products and many other issues that related to these.
There were also several issues that were critiqued and revisited during
this time. Some of these issues were changed due to justifications and
total agreements by the supervisors, operators and me.
51
STEP 7
Finally the AFE was approved. A major project meeting was called and
all of the shop and office personnel and the chain of command that had
been involved with the project from the beginning stages up to that
point were required to attend. The meeting was held to finalize any the
budget, prioritize the sequence of events once the project would begin,
and to discuss any open ended issues. After these issues were taken
care of the processes had to be modified again, due to the chain of
command requesting changes due to statistical impact estimates as well
unrealistic budgetary requests during the initial planning phase. Once
the processes were finalized, all final questions were answered and we
moved on to reviewing the scheme of how the plan was to be
implemented.
Following the meeting, the work began. Between the contractors that
were called in and the in-house work, the project took 5 months,
costing 1.2 million dollars. This was a major facelift to the facility.
The original concept of implementing a lean implementation plan was
to improve the throughput and delivery of the products, increase the
52
companies cost savings, and to make room for several new product
lines that were moving to this facility due to a corporate level buyout of
several competitor lines.
STEP 9
Once the main phase of the plan was completed, another tough step was
in our path to success. I realized that I needed to create a set of
procedures that would help the plan to continue the improvements from
a standard operating procedure (SOP) point of view. After researching
several topics, I quickly discovered a concept that actually falls under
the lean concept. The concept that now covers the SOPs for the
company is called 5-S. **Note there is a further explanation with
examples of 5-S in the Annex that accompanies this research paper.**
The project cost over $800,000. The cost covered new personal
equipment, modifications to existing equipment and machine platforms,
meetings and training resources, machine moves and sustain
operations. The costs did not cover the new machine purchases. The
new machines fell under several different 6 sigma projects that were
taking place simultaneously with the lean plan. This was an excellent
situation because the machines were not allocated to the lean budget,
but played a vital role in the success of the layout of the new lean
facility and the new processes.
The difference in pay back period is huge when justifying the project as
well as promoting the success of a project to the Chain of Command
and the Accounting and Finance Managers.
55
56
CONCLUSION
An organization that has created and implemented a proper Lean
Manufacturing System shows that it has the ability to learn, improve
and change. The Lean production concept is a manufacturing process
distinct to all of the other manufacturing processes. The Lean
Manufacturing system is a system that requires office and shop
personnel cooperation and empowerment, continuous improvement and
process upgrading and change. When an organization decides to
transform its existing manufacturing system in to a lean system, the
organization will make errors along the way. However, in a properly
implemented and maintained lean system, errors are usually a one-time
issue. In a properly designed and managed lean system these errors are
a form of waste that the lean manufacturing philosophy and its methods
identify and eliminate. Once the lean system is in place, and the waste
have been eliminated, an organization which is manufacturing in a
properly run Lean system will optimize its overall business and
customer relations, as well as separate itself from its competitors by
57
58
Definitions:
59
60
Waste is any type of service or operation that the customer does not
pay for. (This is the same as non-value-added activities)
62
63
4.
64
References:
65
APPENDIX I
66
INTRODUCTION
Organization, cleanliness, appearance, quality and safety are issues that
are key factors involved in the direct success of Manufacturing
Processes. All of these issues must be closely observed, tracked and
constantly improved to perform consistently at a level which allows the
company to meet the customers demands. Numerous organizing quality
methods have been developed to prevent problems with the issues
previously listed. Some of the main issues with the proposed methods
were inconsistency and unrealistic goals.
67
or her work area, removing all of the tools that are not needed on
a daily basis. The operator moves all of the seldom used or
special items to an easily identifiable area for storage.
Sorting is an excellent way to free up valuable floor space and
eliminate such things as broken tools, obsolete jigs and fixtures,
scrap and excess raw material. The Sort process also helps
prevent the JIC job mentality (Just In Case.)
2. Set In Order (Seiton) is the second of the 5Ss and focuses on
efficient and effective storage methods.
You must ask yourself these questions:
What do I need to do my job?
Where should I locate this item?
How many of this item do I really need?
Strategies for effective Set In Order are: painting floors,
outlining work areas and locations, shadow boards, and
modular shelving and cabinets for needed items such as trash
69
70
71
LITERATURE REVIEW
Implementing the 5-S concept into an Oil and Gas service industry
company is not the easiest concept to create a plan for. Reason being,
most firms change processes for each job. Their workers are cross
trained and are veterans of their trades. These issues culminate into an
ending conclusion that consists of personnel that are unwilling to
change, inconsistent processes which make it hard for the 5-S leaders to
arrow down their scope to create the perfect scenario and the industry is
not use to improvement plans such as 5-S.
72
Switched
on,
JUNE
2004,
five
successful
years
into
lean
company.
variety of valve options. This article, though not directly for the energy
service industry, correlates perfectly to what I am trying to accomplish
with my research. In the article, Pete Viens explains how ASCO has
implemented Kaizen events or quick change over events in
combination with the 5-S concept, which now occur monthly, have
dramatically changed the way that ASCO manufacturers their valves.
These changes have ultimately increased productivity by 30 - 60 %.
That is a remarkable improvement when you consider the simple
changes that are involved with the 5-S concept.
74
75
76
A few questions that must be addressed that have been discovered after
conducting the literature review for this research paper are as follows:
1.
How will the shop workers react to the changes that will be
Manufacturing Facility?
2.
accept the changes and the new responsibilities from the 5-S
implementation?
3.
What are some key areas with in the shop that need more
From the resources that are available via the internet and
Start small
78
EVALUATION OF METHODOLGY
The outcome of the 5-S concept project was excellent.
All of the
80
introduces the workers to 5-S and provides them the teaching, resources
and time to implement the ideas, they will run with it. The Oil and Gas
work force will do an excellent job due to their pride and knowledge of
tricks of the trade and experience.
The 5-S concept is an excellent concept for any environment or
industry. It is also a must for the Oil and Gas industry. Due to
increased customer demands and work force cutbacks, it is extremely
important to be lean, organized and produce quality product in a safe
81
environment that can compete in todays Oil and Gas market than by
implementing the 5-S concept into the mindset of the worker and the
workplace.
The outcome for the 5-S implementation for the research objective was
positive.
The
quality, safety and productivity reaped the benefits of the 5-S program
too. The over all looks of the facility improved greatly as well. Most
importantly, the workers pride and team mindset improved in a
positive dramatic fashion.
Future research directions for the facility are ongoing. The company
implemented Six Sigma at the corporate level in 1998. This is a long
term project that will take years to fully integrate within the mindset of
the office and shop personnel.
workers in the tens of thousands and over 100 facilities World wide, it
will take a while for the concept to be fully grasped across the board.
The 5-S concept has been updated and ongoing everyday after the
conclusion of this research with in the specified facility.
The
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REFERENCES
1.
2.
3.
4.
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