Feb 19 2013
Oppama Style | Dumontis
See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing
A look at production behind the scenes at Nissan’s Oppama Plant, where everyday the Nissan Juke, Cube, Sylphy and 100%-electric LEAF roll off the lines
I did visit the Oppama plant(追浜工場), in 1980. Then it was making the Nissan Leopard for the Japanese market, the company’s cars were sold in the US under the Datsun brand, and they used Kanbans, which they called “workplates” to avoid borrowing the vocabulary of archrival “Company T from Aichi Prefecture.”
Times have changed. No one then could imagine that Nissan would ever fall under the control of a “second-rate” company like Renault, and even less that this odd couple would actually work while other seemingly better matches — like DaimlerBenz with Chrysler — would fail. And the Oppama plant soldiers on.
In this three-minute video of an 8-hour process, you catch glimpses of stamping, welding, painting, and assembly. The first thing that struck me was to see the superintendent, who was guiding the video tour, wearing a suit and tie. Perhaps it was for the camera but, in other Japanese plants I have been in, it would have been a faux-pas, as executives make a point of not standing out from shop floor operators by what they wear.
The little we see of the operations is as expected, frome the body welding robots to the “pirate-ship” carts of parts that move along with the line in final assembly and the different types of engines lifted into the car bodies.
The plant has a densely-packed, lived-in look. It has been around for a while, and looks like a place where people make cars. By contrast, some of the newer plants in Germany like Porsche in Leipzig or Volkswagen in Dresden, look like showrooms.
And a hat tip to Dumontis for calling it Oppama Style.
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May 31 2013
Using videos to improve operations | Part 3 – Shooting shop floor videos
Following are a few recommendations on the art of taking shop floor videos:
This needs to be considered when deciding who will be holding the camera. You will naturally prefer someone who is already handy with it, and that is likely to be from experience capturing family occasions, sports, or from making movies as an amateur. The ability to keep a camera steady and pay attention to lighting, composition and focus is valuable, but the camera operator will have to be coached on the specific objectives of shop floor videos.
Many plants have mezzanines or catwalks that provide a view from above. Being observed from such a place, however, may be uncomfortable for the operators, as well as too far to zoom in on the hands and capture any voice comments. The middle ground is to shoot from the top of a stepladder located within zooming and hearing range of the operator station, just far enough to avoid any kind of interference
This works, until the operator leaves the station to walk beyond the reach of the zoom, at which point getting down off the stepladder to follow the operator while recording causes a few seconds of the action to be lots. A better solution is to hand over the camera to another team member on the ground, or even to involve more than one camera. In any case, this needs to be planned. Image stability is not an issue on the stepladder, but it is when following an operator’s movement across the floor, and you do not want a video that will make participants sea-sick during review. While professional tracking shots require equipment that is not available in a factory, some amateurs have supplemented the camera’s own image stabilization by shooting from a wheelchair.
All we need for this purpose is one representative execution, and the operator can tell us if there is anything special or abnormal about it. If possible, we just take it into account during the analysis; otherwise, we make another recording. To make sure we have one complete execution, we start recording a few seconds before the operation starts and stop a few seconds after it ends.
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By Michel Baudin • Technology • 1 • Tags: Photography, Plant video, Shop floor, SMED, Video, Video analysis, Work Sampling