Lean
manufacturing is the business model of tactical methods whose focus on
eliminating waste while delivering quality products on time at least cost with
greater efficiency. It also offers significant environmental benefits. In the
U.S some sectors such as aerospace, automotive, electronics, furniture
production, and health care have already implemented lean manufacturing.
Lean
manufacturing’s elements:
·
Elimination
of Waste: Waste is defined as anything that consumes material or labor
and that does not add value to the final end customer.
·
Equipment Reliability: Equipment
that runs when production requires it to run
·
Continuous Flow: Material flows one part
at a time compare to big batches.Reduces lead time; thus speeding up order to
delivery time.
·
Stop the Line Quality System: The
production line is stopped when bad quality is being produced.
·
Kanban System: Kanban is
a pull material system. The material is pulled through the production process
by customer demand. Kanban uses cards to move material along the value stream.
·
Standard Work: Standard Work is a
system of organizing work steps and documenting them. The team leader prepares
the Standard Work.
·
Visual Management: When a plant
utilizes Visual Management fully, a new employee can understand how to do his
job from the visual information in the plant.
·
In Station Process Control: Each
workstation has the information and equipment for the worker to inspect and
produce good quality parts.
·
Level Production: Production is
leveled to customer demand.
·
Talk Time: Production is paced to
customer demand. Talk Time = Time available to produce a product divided by the
number of parts that the customer wants to buy.
Origin of Lean
Manufacturing
Lean
manufacturing originated from Toyoda (now known as Toyota) production system which
is often referred to as Just in Time Production. After World War II the Toyota
Company became successful when Japanese factory owners adopted a number of
American production and quality techniques. Henry Ford and the Statistical
Quality Control ideas of Edwards Deming became the foundation of Toyota’s
production process.
The concept of Lean
manufacturing was developed by the Toyota executive, Taiichi Ohno.
Mr. Ohno refined, honed, and improved in all areas henry ford and Dr. W.
Edwards Deming created. He did so to cut cost of production and to eliminate
types of waste
Mr.
Ohno was a Japanese businessman.
He is considered to be the father of the Toyota Production
System, which became Lean Manufacturing in the U.S. He graduated of the Nagoya Technical High School (Japan).
Lean manufacturing vs. traditional manufacturing
Traditional
manufacturing has been driven by sales forecasts that companies need to produce
and stockpile inventory to support. Lean manufacturing is based on the concept
that production should be drive by the actual customer demands and
requirements. Instead of pushing product to the marketplace, it is pulled
through by the customers' actual needs. A lean enterprise can produce higher
quality products, in lower quantities, with shorter lead times, with less
committed inventory, at lower costs that traditional manufactures that mass
produce.
The Ford
company system of production was based on “continuous system for manufacturing.”
In continuous manufacturing system the items are
produced to be stock and not for specific orders. This system of manufacturing
did not last long, because Ford sales started to decrease. This was due because
less and less people were buying cars. Therefore Ford was losing money for each
car produced.
Willow Run Bomber Plant
The Willow Run manufacturing plant was located San
Diego California. It was constructed during World War II by Ford Motor Company for the mass production of the B-24 Liberator military aircraft.
Albert Kahn, an industrial architect sketched the L building.
Mr. Taylor studied the workplace, formulating landmark
efficiency standards that are still relevant in business today. In his studied
he concluded that motivated workers tend to work more efficiently and a way of accomplish
that was to pay the workers enough for their output. It also concluded that time
was an essential management tool.
Terms
Continues
improvement is an ongoing effort to improve the
quality of products, services or processes.
Best
practices is a method or technique that has
consistently shown results superior to those achieved with other means, and
that is used as a benchmark.
Just-in-Time
means making only what is needed, when it is needed, and in the amount needed.
Value added is the amount by which the value of an article
is increased at each stage of its production, exclusive of initial costs.
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