There are three main problems in any production
system:
- Waste (Muda)
- Instability
- Variability (Mura)
|
The foundation of the Lean Manufacturing House is stability.
When applied to a production system, this refers to team
stability, standardized work methods, continuously monitored strategy, etc. At
the base of the house are two elements on which the remainder of the house is
built; (1) Reduction of muda (wastes) and (2) Kaizen - continuous
improvement. The 2 pillars of the Lean Manufacturing house (JIT and JIDOKA)
are based on:
- Heijunka: sequenced and linear production.
- Standardized Work: reduced variability of work processes: A system designed to manage sudden demand fluctuations as they occur.
The tools used in the walls of the house to support its roof - the objective of the method - are:
- For the JIT pillar: Pulled flow, Takt time and continuous flow.
- For the Jidoka pillar: man-machine separation (one operator manages several machines) or automation (one operator manages several machines).
- The roof, or objective of the Lean Manufacturing method, is summarized by CQD, reduced production costs, improved quality level, matching delivery times to customer needs.
The Lean Manufacturing House can only grow if its foundations are built first. The use of Ecoflex acts as a catalyst for the policy of waste reduction and continuous improvement and as a tool for implementing the Kaizen attitude. Only a highly flexible and modular system like Ecoflex can offer a production system to proceed to the later steps of Lean Manufacturing; work standardization, sequencing (Heijunka), JIT and JIDOKA.
PreviousPost: Benefits of Lean Manufacturing
---
Integrated Products
& Services Inc. was established in 2006 as a lean manufacturing and
material handling consultation firm and have grown into a leader in the distribution
of modular pipe racking and shelving systems in Canada.
No comments:
Post a Comment