Lean Manufacturing

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Lean Manufacturing: Lean Manufacturing – A way to eliminate waste and improve efficiency in a manufacturing environment. Lean focuses on flow, the value stream and eliminating ‘muda’, the Japanese word for waste. Lean manufacturing is the production of goods using less of everything compared to traditional mass production: less waste, human effort, manufacturing space, investment in tools, inventory, and engineering time to develop a new product. Lean is the systematic approach to identifying and eliminating waste through continuous improvement by flowing the product or service at the pull of your customer in pursuit of perfection. Origin: During II world war, the economic condition of Japan was heavily destroyed. They had limited infrastructure, inventories, machine & materials. So they decided to produce a small batch of products which would reduce inventories; it means they would need less capital to produce the same product. Lean manufacturing is a management philosophy derived mostly from the Toyota Production System(TPS) because Toyota Motor Company’s Eiji Toyoda and Taiichui Ohno are given credit for its approach and innovations, this system identified as "lean" only in the 1990s. Procreation: Lean was generated from the Just-in-time (JIT) philosophy of continuous and forced problem solving Just-in-time is supplying customers with exactly what they want when they want it With JIT, supplies and components are “pulled” through a system to arrive

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LEAN TOOLS

Transcript of Lean Manufacturing

Lean Manufacturing:Lean Manufacturing A way to eliminate waste and improve efficiency in a manufacturing environment. Lean focuses on flow, the value stream and eliminating muda, the Japanese word for waste. Lean manufacturing is the production of goods using less of everything compared to traditional mass production: less waste, human effort, manufacturing space, investment in tools, inventory, and engineering time to develop a new product. Lean is the systematic approach to identifying and eliminating waste through continuous improvement by flowing the product or service at the pull of your customer in pursuit of perfection.

Origin:During II world war, the economic condition of Japan was heavily destroyed. They had limited infrastructure, inventories, machine & materials. So they decided to produce a small batch of products which would reduce inventories; it means they would need less capital to produce the same product. Lean manufacturing is a management philosophy derived mostly from the Toyota Production System(TPS) because Toyota Motor Companys Eiji Toyoda and Taiichui Ohno are given credit for its approach and innovations, this system identified as "lean" only in the 1990s.

Procreation:Lean was generated from the Just-in-time (JIT) philosophy of continuous and forced problem solving Just-in-time is supplying customers with exactly what they want when they want it With JIT, supplies and components are pulled through a system to arrive where they are needed when they are needed. Just in time (JIT) is a production strategy that strives to improve a business' return on investment by reducing in-process inventory and associated carrying costs. Just in time is a type of operations management approach which originated in Japan in the 1950s. It was adopted by Toyota and other Japanese manufacturing firms, with excellent results: Toyota and other companies that adopted the approach ended up raising productivity significantly.

Areas of Lean: Quality- Increasing quality. Cost- Reducing cost. Productivity- Increasing productivity. Safety and morale- Ensuring safety.Waste elimination:Waste is anything that happens to a product that does not add value from the customers perspective. Products being stored, inspected or delayed, products waiting in queues, and defective products do not add value. There are seven major types of waste Overproduction Producing more than the customer orders or producing too early. Inventory of any kind is usually wastage. TPS pays particular attention to the waste of overproduction. Queues Time is a limited resource. In the manufacturing world, time is money. Customer requirements are calculated to the second. Idle time, storage, and waiting are wastes. Transportation Moving material between plants, between work centers, and handling more than once is waste. Inventory Preventing unnecessary inventory is critical to the success of the Toyota Production System. The smooth, continuous flow of work through each process ensures that excess amounts of inventory are minimized unnecessary raw material, work-in process (WIP), finished goods, and excess operating supplies are wastes. MotionMotion is the movement of equipment or people. Wasted motion occupies time and energy. Ideally all unnecessary movements or actions are eliminated from the work process. Over-processing It refers to the works performed on product that adds no value. Over processing is as wasteful as insufficient processing. Employees must learn to identify over processing waste. Defective product The waste of correction is a result of poor internal quality. Producing defective products or products requiring repairs adds the cost of extra manpower, materials, facilities and conveyance measures.Advantages of Lean Manufacturing: Increased overall productivity. Reduced amount of floor space required for production. Reduced manufacturing lead time. Improved flexibility to react to changes in production flow. Improved quality of the product.Disadvantages of Lean Manufacturing: Difficulty involved with changing processes to implement lean principals. Long term commitment required for permanent change. Very risky process in case of supply chain issues while changing over to lean.House of Lean:As a business philosophy, Lean can be envisioned as a house. The House of Lean is formed by a foundation (Stability), two pillars (Just in Time and Jidoka), and a roof (Perfection). Many of the tactical components of Lean have been placed within these separate areas to give you a convenient frame of reference and an understanding of where certain tools fall within the vast arena of Lean.

House of Lean

Role of Lean for Producers:

Role of Lean for Customers:

Lean Manufacturing Tools:Lean manufacturing in a factory is maintained by several tools. The number and type of tool depends on the product that is to be produced and production system of the product. Most important tools are 5S Andon Bottleneck Analysis Continuous Flow Gemba (The Real Place) Heijunka (Level Scheduling) Hoshin Kanri (Policy Deployment) Kanban (Pull System) Cellular manufacturing Jidoka (Autonomation) Just-In-Time (JIT) Kaizen(Continuous Improvement) KPI (Key Performance Indicator) Muda (Waste) Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE) PDCA (Plan, Do, Check, Act) Poka-Yoke (Error Proofing) Root Cause Analysis Single Minute Exchange of Die (SMED) Six Big Losses SMART Goals Standardized Work Takt Time Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) Value Stream MappingLean Manufacturing Tools Suitable for Garments Factory : 5S- Strategy for creating a well-organized, smoothly flowing manufacturing process.

5S- system

Cellular Manufacturing-Dividing the manufacture of products into semi-autonomous and multi-skilled teams known as work cells.

Cellular Manufacturing

Kanban-A system that uses replenishment signals to simplify inventory management.

Kanban- system

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