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Jun 24 2013

A French government agency report on Lean and Safety | EU-OSHA

See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

“The implementation of this organizational model of production [Lean] may result if certain conditions are not met, in a deterioration of the workers´ health (musculoskeletal disorders, psychosocial risks, accidents).”

Michel Baudin‘s insight:

This document, from a French government agency, asserts that the implementation of Lean could make saferty worse in French plants. This might suggest that, without Lean, safety in French plants is adequate.

Lean is debated in France with the zero-sum assumption that, if you improve productivity and quality, it can only be at the expense of something else, usually safety. The idea that you can improve all dimensions of performance at the same time is not accepted.

My experience of French plants is of safety levels that are perhaps higher than China’s but a far cry from what you see in Japan or the US. The accidents waiting to happen range from people and forklifts sharing space without marked aisles, wine served in factory cafeterias, slick floors in metal working shops, operator jobs that require long carries of heavy parts,…

While it is conceivable that a poor Lean implementation could make this even worse, a reasonably good one is guaranteed to improve on this dismal situation, simply by paying long overdue attention to the details of operator job designs. There is nothing intrinsically wrong with the INRS summary of recommendations, but they are already part of Lean.

See on osha.europa.eu

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By Michel Baudin • Web scrapings 0 • Tags: China, France, Japan, Lean manufacturing, Occupational safety and health, Plant

Jun 21 2013

Using videos to improve operations | Part 6 – Quick simograms

Here, we finally start collecting measurements from the video, focusing on what we can collect while watching without stopping. In this mode, we can break down operator time by broad categories like  “Waiting,” “Walking,” or “Assembling,” but we don’t have the time to name each task and collect comments or improvement ideas. This will require a more detailed and time-consuming analysis. 

One method, developed by Christophe Caberlon, involves two analysts, one viewing the video and the other one filling out an electronic spreadsheet. Instead of looking for state-change events in the video, we look at it in 5-second increments. Every five seconds, the analyst viewing the video calls out the state the operator has been in since the previous call. Each 5-second. Interval is assigned one column in the spreadsheet and there is one row for each state. Based on the call, the second analyst switches the color of the cell for the state and time interval.

Counting in 5-second intervals involves aliasing, but it is not a problem for a rough-cut estimate. The rows in the spreadsheet do show the state transitions in a Gantt-chart like format called “simogram,” and can summarized into proportions of time spent in each state, as in the following example:

Simogram example

This example uses cell background color to express content, which is not generally recommended because Excel does not provide built-in tools either for quick input or for analysis. The result, however, is graphically much more attractive than filling the cells with Xs. Changing the background color of a cell requires multiple steps, which cannot be repeated every five seconds. These steps, however can be recorded as a Macro. In this example, the macro has Ctrl+q as a hot key to mark a cell and Ctrl+w to unmark it. Also, each 5-second time segment must be assigned to one and only one category. When working your way through a video, it is impossible to avoid cases where one segment will be missed and another accidentally assigned to more than one category.

To detect these errors, we need to count the gray cells by column, and to summarize the times into relevant aggregates, we need to count them by rows. While Excel provides no built-in function to do this, you can find add-on modules to do it. The modules used above are due to C. Pearson. 

This method is also restricted in the number of states to track. It is feasible for two or three but not fifteen. With the limited number of choices, it is a good idea to include an “Other” state. The states should also be clear and unambiguous, such as:

  • Walking: the operator’s legs are moving.
  • Working: the operator’s hands are moving.
  • Waiting: all the operator’s limbs are still.
  • Touching: One of the operator’s hands is touching the product.

Categories that are abstract and subject to interpretation, like “Value-added” should be avoided. Note also that an operator who is Working or Touching, may be handling the work piece or transforming it, and we don’t have enough categories at this level to make the difference. 

Timer Pro provides a method called “Non-stop timing,” in which the analyst simply clicks on a category when observing a state transition, and the time since the previous click is automatically assigned to this category. This eliminates the aliasing due to using 5-second intervals, and relieves one analyst from the task of clicking the right spreadsheet cell every 5 seconds.

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By Michel Baudin • Technology 2 • Tags: Excel, industrial engineering, Microsoft Excel, Spreadsheet, Video analysis

Jun 19 2013

Factory to Forecourt |Burnaston Plant | Toyota UK

See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

“Welcome to the Press Shop at Burnaston, where immense presses exert thousands of tonnes of pressure to transform sheet steel into intricate body panels, and …’

Michel Baudin‘s insight:

Yesterday, Toyota UK posted eight videos on Youtube, showing various stages of production of an Auris at their Burnaston plant. So it is a current look at their production process.

See on www.youtube.com

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By Michel Baudin • Web scrapings 0 • Tags: Burnaston, Business, Lean manufacturing, Michel Baudin, Toyota, Youtube

Jun 17 2013

GE Locomotive Plant Threatened, Lean Viewed as Salvation | GoErie.com

See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

“[…]But lean manufacturing is the norm, not the exception, in the global economy. Yet it’s also true that hands-on workers can be innovators about how to improve production and streamline work flow.”

See on news.google.com

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By Michel Baudin • Press clippings 1 • Tags: GE Transportation, General Electric, Lean manufacturing

Jun 8 2013

Using videos to improve operations | Part 5 – Watch it in fast motion

Christophe Caberlon has a special way of conducting this first step: at 6X normal speed. When reviewing videos with the operators who have been recorded, he has found that accelerated motion has the effect of drawing attention to the activities that consume the most time, as the ones that do not are filtered out. If the operator spends the majority of the time walking back and forth to a shelf to pick parts, a fast-motion viewing of the recording makes it dramatically obvious and compelling, making the operator eager to help improve the process. After trying various 2X, 4X and 8X, he has found that the 6X ratio of acceleration works best for this purpose.

When Christophe  told me about this, it reminded me of a scene in the movie The Hunt for Red October, in which sound is used the same way. Jonesy, the sonar operator in the American submarine tracking the soviet submaring Red October, has just heard the sound of the propellers disappearing when the Russian boat turned on its “silent” propulsion system. But he still heard a vague rumbling. The analysis software categorizes this sound as magma displacement, but the sonar operator believes that the sound is made by the submarine. To convince his captain of that, he plays the recording at 10 times the speed, which turns the rumbling into a rythmic “tac tac tac” characteristic of a human artifact and not magma displacement.

The idea of watching the video in fast  motion is that, by filtering, it lets you see patterns you would otherwise miss. The same is true of slow motion, but fast motion has the advantage,… of being fast. You wouldn’t want to review an entire 1-hour video in slow motion, but you may do it in a few excerpts as part of the detailed analysis we will go into in a coming post.

Of course, the idea of reviewing a video in fast motion is more interesting if you can actually do it, and the most common video players around don’t let you run at 6X. I tried the following:

  • Quicktime V. 7.7 through “A/V controls” lets you run videos at speeds up to 3X.
  • Windows Media Player does not let you change the speed.
  • Real Player lets you change speed by powers of two by pressing Ctrl-Shift-F4, but the resulting accelerated videos are not watchable.
  • VLC media player lets you use any speed up to 4X, and powers of two beyond, up to 32X.

Among video editors, Windows Live Movie Maker lets you change speeds, but Google’s Picasa 3 doesn’t. For Windows Live Movie Maker, it is again in powers of 2.

In video annotation software, ANVIL doesn’t do fast-motion, but Timer Pro does. To view a video in 6X in Timer Pro, you click on the Video tab and set the speed to 12. The video then plays at the right speed but the a wrong aspect ratio. If, however, you click on the Comparison tab, you can view at 6X normal speed and with the correct aspect ratio, albeit in a small window that you cannot adjust.

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By Michel Baudin • Technology 1 • Tags: Google, Hunt for Red October, Time-lapse photography, United States, Video editing, Windows Live Movie Maker, Windows Media Player, Windows Movie Maker

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