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a fantastic week of educational training

Hi Rene and the rest of the Green Belt collective,

I just wanted to thank you all for a fantastic week of educational training.

You all made the training both fun and informative.  I might have just scraped through but I wouldn’t have been able to do it without you guys…thanks for your support.

 

Have a fantastic Christmas and wonderful New Year.

 

All the very best,

Doug

 

PS, Watch out for  those Monkeys!!!!

 

Doug Calderwood  Cert Ed. MIfL

Regional Manager

Developing Performance Partnership Ltd (Trading as Develop-u) | Rotherham

a lot easier to move "stones"

it was a great pleasure to attend your course.

 

Thanks for your offer for help. If I get the opportunity I will contact you.

Help and friends are always welcome. It makes it a lot easier to move “stones”.

Hopefully see you again.

Edwin Wagner
Software Configuration Manager – CASSIDIAN, an EADS Company
Configuration Management –  Manching – Germany

new KPI TEEP in Lean Six Sigma

World Class OEE is generally accepted as >85%

The world class OEE performance of 85% is comprised of:

Availability = 90%

Performance = 95%

Quality = 99.9%

Research indicates that average OEE for manufacturing plants is 60%

How does your organisation compare against the ‘best in class’ performance?

Imagine what a 40% improvement in OEE (going from 60% to 85%) could do for your organisations competiveness and profitability!

Organisations are now factoring in how often the equipment is used throughout the year (24/7) – this is called the Loading.  For example if the equipment is used for 40 hours in a week (168 hours) the loading is 40/168 = 23.8%

This can be factored into the relatively new KPI – Total Effective Equipment Performance (TEEP) metric as follows TEEP = Loading x OEE

Black Belt training during the summer in Würzburg

during the months of July and August there will be several green and black belt session for Lean Six Sigma; all events will be held in the Maritim Hotel in Würzburg.

Zentral und unweit des Hauptbahnhofs erwartet das stilvolle Maritim Hotel Würzburg seine Gäste. Direkt am Mainufer gelegen, bietet es einen herrlichen Ausblick auf die Festung Marienberg, die hoch über der Stadt thront. Die barocke Innenstadt mit ihren zahlreichen Sehenswürdigkeiten lässt sich bequem zu Fuß erkunden. Elegantes Ambiente, verbunden mit herzlicher Gastfreundschaft, und der direkte Anschluss an das Congress Centrum Würzburg schaffen ideale Voraussetzungen für jeden Reisezweck.

 

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Lean Development in Lean Six Sigma

The 13 Lean Development principles are:

  1. Establish customer value
  2. Front-load the Product Development process
  3. Levelled Product Development process flow
  4. Rigorous standardisation
  5. A Chief Engineer System to integrate development
  6. Balance functional and cross-functional expertise
  7. Towering technical competence in Engineers
  8. Integrate suppliers into the PD system
  9. Build in learning and continuous improvement
  10. Build a culture to support excellence and relentless improvement
  11. Adapt technology to fit your people and processes
  12. Align the organisation through visual communication,, ensuring problems are visible
  13. Enable organisational learning
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Visual Management is key within Lean Six Sigma projects

The key to world class flexibility and high quality is the ability to understand at a glance what is going on in the workplace. Visual Management helps everyone in the workplace become involved in monitoring progress and customer service. Visual Management guarantees increases in efficiency, quality levels, productivity, and reductions in man hrs on the job. VM not only makes problems obvious, it provides a means to solve them The purpose of VM is to make everybody’s job easier VM uses all 5 senses to create a simpler, self regulating facility, resulting in increased Quality, productivity and morale.

Pursue Perfection through Standardisation;

Now that improvements have been made it is important that they become the new STANDARD and the team do not fall back into the old ways of working. It does not stifle creativity, it enhances it.

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Lean Six Sigma TIM WOOD in engineering

Waste in Engineering Examples

Transportation:  Excessive data or information handoffs

Inventory: Requirements, specifications, documents waiting to be processed, test data waiting to be validated

Motion: Searching for information, or data, attending unnecessary, ineffective meetings

Waiting:  Inter-task variation, bottlenecks, failure of supplier to meet customer need dates

Over Production: Mass document releases, Preparing excessive reports, broadcast email of information

Over Processing: Gold plated designs (Including design features not required by customer, Re-inventing what has already been designed

Defects: Faulty, incomplete or inaccurate data, data translations

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Lean started withThe Wright approach to product development

Wilbur and Orville Wright ran a bicycle repair shop in Dayton, Ohio USA but set to designing and building the first aeroplane  in their spare time working in their shed!

So how did two hobbyists manage to achieve what many well funded, full time, industry backed inventors had failed to achieve?

They collected the existing knowledge on what experiments and tests had already been carried out then studied the results.

They soon realised that many thousands of hours and dollars were being spent for very little time in the air – 5000 hours of design & build time for 5 seconds air time was typical.

They identified 3 critical knowledge areas:

  • construction of the sustaining wings
  •  generation and application of power
  • balancing and steering of the machine

Between 1900 and June  1903 the brothers:

 

Devised

•Lift and drag measurement techniques for kites and gliders
•A wind tunnel
•Balances for measuring lift, drag and drift

Discovered

•Lift and drag calculations that others were using were incorrect
•Optimum wing shapes and ratios
•Optimum control surface areas
Invented
•Wing warping technology to control the plane in flight
•A highly efficient propeller
•A lightweight powerful engine
•The science of aeronautics

They conducted and meticulously recorded extensive experiments.

These often challenged and proved wrong the existing ‘knowledge’ and wisdom of the time.

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Lean Tools and Technology in Lean Development

– Adapt technology to fit your People & Process; In some organisations it could be the opposite (Technology has to be mature first in accordance withTechnical Readiness Level process)

– Align organisation through simple visual communication More difficult for Engineering .

– Use powerful tools for standardization & organizational learning Lean organisation (reducing number of layers…)

at Toyota are the best exponents of Lean Development and since 1991 have identified 4 Critical Success Factors as follows:
  • Creating a strong vision to ensure that design engineers care about what the customer thinks of their future services and products
  • Limit the number of late design changes by striving for Perfect Drawings and Zero EC after production drawing release
  • Focus on precise and tightly scheduled industrialised drawing production to increase effectiveness
  • Focus on quality and cost of production itself to ensure build is with the cost bracket
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Lean Engineering

Manufacturing has a relatively small influence on the overall cost and quality of the product or service supplied.

Remember the Value Stream?

When Lean principles are applied across all the functions in the value stream, true competitive advantage can be gained.

This is sometimes known as Lean Enterprise Lean Product Development demands an integrated multi-disciplined approach.

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