0% found this document useful (0 votes)
235 views28 pages

TPM Introduction AME PDF

Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) is a holistic approach to equipment maintenance that aims to maximize equipment effectiveness and eliminate breakdowns through employee participation across various departments. The key elements of TPM include autonomous maintenance conducted by operators, planned maintenance, and improving maintenance processes like scheduling. Implementing TPM results in higher overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) through increased reliability, performance, and quality.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
235 views28 pages

TPM Introduction AME PDF

Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) is a holistic approach to equipment maintenance that aims to maximize equipment effectiveness and eliminate breakdowns through employee participation across various departments. The key elements of TPM include autonomous maintenance conducted by operators, planned maintenance, and improving maintenance processes like scheduling. Implementing TPM results in higher overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) through increased reliability, performance, and quality.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 28

Total Productive Maintenance

Implementing TPM in Baxter Aibonito


Overview

TPM definition, elements overview, tools & expectations

Continuous TPM improvement metric

OEE definition & calculation

Example of Daily Walk Around checklist

Examples of TPM process certification

Examples of OEE goals

Example of TPM team

2
What is TPM?

The TPM concept was developed to support (JIT)


You cant be lean if you dont have reliable equipment

Total Participation from top management to shop


Total floor

Productive Relentless Root Cause Analysis and Elimination


Maintenance
Prevention Philosophy
Autonomous Maintenance
Visual Controls
Kaizen Approach

OEE is a metric to evaluate the effectiveness of


your TPM improvements

3
Autonomous Maintenance Philosophy

TPM Is a Paradigm Shift for Everyone


Old Attitude TPM Attitude

I operate, you fix. We are all responsible


I fix, you design. for our equipment.
I design, you operate.

ManagementOperators.Maintenance
EngineersEVERYONE!

4
Autonomous Maintenance

Pre-requisite level requirements TPM Team


1. A cross functional TPM team is established
and resourced appropriately from
Team Machine 408
management. All team member have a Machine Operator J. Alicea
defined role, team/individual PMOs are
established and aligned, meeting frequency Auto Technician - R. Torres
identified, and all team members participate Manufacturing GL/Supv - W. Cintrn
consistently Auto Eng Y. Perez
Process Eng L. Casiano
Quality Rep M Guma
VS Manager J. Blanco
Tec lead- aka planner role/activity coordinator - Ruben Morales
Autonomous Maintenance

RAB Standard Work Supervisor &


Pre-Requisite level requirements GL
3. A Daily walk around checklist is
developed and performed Daily
consistently for a period of 1
month. Operator and technician
responsibilities need to be clearly
defined.
Weekly

Monthly
Autonomous Maintenance

Pre-Requisite level requirements Departments accomplishments

4. A Visual Management system is in 4. Pitch Charts, Daily Accountability


place to capture issues identified Board, TPM Team , Tier 2 Meeting
during Pre-Flight. Daily Walk
Around. An Accountability
processes established to address
identified issues in a timely manner.
Key Themes / Tools / Elements of TPM

Autonomous Maintenance
Visual Controls
6s
Utilize Predictive Technologies
Reliability Centered Maintenance (RCM)
Mistake Proofing
Set-up Reduction
Understanding your downtime losses (OEE, Loss Tree, etc)
Return equipment and workplace to ideal conditions
Workshops
Kaizensmall continuous improvements

Similar to Leanyou need to use the right tool as part of


TPM to drive sustained OEE improvements

8
Eight mayor pillar of TPM

TPM

Early Equipment Management


Process Quality Management
Autonomous Maintenance

Safety and Environmental

Equipment and Process


Education and Training

Planned Maintenance
Improvement (OEE)

TPM in the Office


Management

TPM Improvement Tool Box:


RCM, Predictive Technologies, kaizen, PM optimization, planning and scheduling
enhancements, 6S, set-up reduction, etc.

Key Management Principles / Senior Leadership Involvement

9
TPM
Progressive Levels of Improvement

Gold (5)

Silver Evaluated
and Improved
(4)

Silver
Deployed (3)

Bronze (2)

Approach (1)

No Approach
(0)

10
Key Aspects of implementing TPM
A Plant TPM Steering Committee is formed to establish and drive a
comprehensive plant wide PE focus.
Senior Management involvement and leadership (essential!)
This is NOT a Maintenance / Engineering Initiative
Selection of critical equipment (pilot phase)
Develop a Maintenance Master Plan to improve overall
Maintenance capability / approach
Need to ensure getting the most value for investment
OEE improvements at the right cost!

Evaluate Predictive Technologies


Adopt Early Equipment Management philosophy
Drive improvements in Maintenance Planning / Scheduling

11
Key Element For Success: Planning & Scheduling

Planning and Scheduling Efficiency

Typical Job Planned On-the-Run (Time)


Planning
Activity
Same job if Professionally Planned (Time) Work
Activity

Typical Maintenance Craftsmans Day Reactive WITHOUT Proactive with


Planning & Planning &
Planned vs. On The Run Scheduling Scheduling

Receiving instructions 5% 3%
Obtaining Tools and materials 12% 5%
Travel to and from job (both with and w/o tools and materials) 15% 10%
Coordination Delays 8% 3%
Idle at job site 5% 2%
Late starts and early quits 5% 1%
Authorized breaks and relief 10% 10%
Excess personal time (extra breaks, phone calls, smoke breaks, slow 5% 1%
return from lunch and breaks, etc.)
Sub-Total 65% 35%

Direct actual work accomplished (as a % if whole day) 35% 65%

[ 12 ]

12
Key Element For Success: Planning & Scheduling

Work Management

The Planner/Scheduler role is a skilled position!

Through adopting this approach, you can significantly increase your EFT
resources through the elimination of wastenot people! [ 13 ]

13
Key Element For Success: Planning & Scheduling

Move from this.

to this!
14
The Overall Approach

Establishes a common, comprehensive TPM approach


Utilize existing mechanisms where applicable
Visual Boards, Accountability Processes, Operation Mechanism, etc

Utilize the right problem solving and improvement tools


Requires systematic approaches
Equipment optimization requires total employee involvement from
top to bottom
Leverages best practices so we can all get better in quicker fashion
Optimize what we have before adding new equipment (Maximize ROIC)
Ensure we are driving total organizational value

15
OEE Standard Calculation
Measuring TPM Program Effectiveness

Internal Use Only


OEE Standard Calculation Highlights

OEE = Availability x Performance x Quality


Availability = _____Actual Operating Time
Planned Production Time

Planned Production = Plant Operating Planned Shut Down


Time Hours Time

Planned Shut Down: Periods when not scheduled (required) to produce (e.g.
weekends , off-shifts, breaks, lunch, etc).
Note: If your scheduled to run during breaks and lunches, this is not considered
Planned Shutdown Time.

Quality = Good Output


Total Output
Total Output is the total output produced (ie: units, eaches, ft, etc) including
good, bad, reworked, QC Samples, and product produced during changeover.

Good Output refers to the total number of good product produced through the
process that is available for sale, without any type of rework or re-processing.

17
OEE Typical Distribution

United States Business

Scrap/Rework
5%

Set-up
16% Running Time
(O.E.E.)
40%

Breakdowns
16%

Minor
Stoppages
23%

18
World-Class OEE Measurements

With World Class


OEE of 85%, The
Same Equipment
Has 112% More
Capacity

19
OEE Implementation Screen View Kiefel
Measure your improvements

Create an OEE baseline for each equipment on TPM program. At least 30 days
data provides a better view of equipment and system performance

Establish an OEE goal per equipment and expected dates. Each equipment has
an accountable team that supports goal achievements.

OEE needs to be understood by everyone- have a systematic training method to


convey OEE calculation and understanding. Without this, OEE is just a number

Steering committee supports activities towards improvements. They are at the


Gemba when these activities occur

21
"OEE is a good beginning, and many organizations
can use it to help themselves, but it's only part of
the equation. As with anything, it can be applied
well or not applied well. The critical thing people
have to focus on is how to actually use OEE to drive
change in an organization in an effective manner.
Ryan Hale, lead consultant with Stroud Consulting
Industry Week, OEE: The Heart of the Matter, Feb. 01, 2009

22
Category Definitions

Plants must assess all plant equipment (production, critical systems,


critical testing equipment, etc) and assign it an appropriate TPM
category based on its criticality to your operation. Utilize the following
guidelines for determining the appropriate category level:

Category 1: Critical Plant Equipment


Equipment selected by the plant as critical plant equipment that affects either the entire
plant or one of the Key Value Streams. Factors to consider may include:
Does this equipment shutdown an entire Key Plant Value Stream or the entire Plant?
Is this critical equipment with no back-up capabilities?
Is this equipment capacity constrained?
Is this operation the bottleneck in the value stream?
Is this equipment critical from a supply / customer risk perspective?
Does this equipment has a significant impact on other Strategic imperatives (ie: quality issues, high
conversion loss, etc)

Category 1A: TPM Pilot Equipment


Category 1A Equipment is a strategic sub-set of Category 1. These will be the pilot
equipment strategically selected as most important to the plant, where TPM efforts will
initially be focused in the plant. It is recommended to focus on 3-6 pieces of equipment as
Category 1A.

23
Category Definitions

Category 2: Key Equipment


This equipment is considered to have limited or minimal impact to your overall
operations. Factors to consider include:
Critical equipment with some back-up capabilities
May shutdown a portion of a key value stream.
Non-capacity constrained
May have an limited impact on other strategic imperatives (ie: Quality, conversion loss, financials, etc)

Category 3: Non-Critical Equipment


This includes all non-critical equipment
Non-critical equipment
Auxiliary equipment

24
TPM
Pre-Requisite

25
TPM
Bronze

26
OEE Improvement Target Matrix

Based on your OEE baseline, the following matrix illustrates the


minimum OEE target for the various TPM levels of achievement.

OEE Baseline Bronze Silver Gold

0-30% 45% 60% 80%

30-49% 55% 65% 80%

50-59% 65% 75% 82%

60-69% 70% 80% 84%

70-79% 80% 83% 86%

80-85% 85% 86% 88%

27
Autonomous Maintenance Example
Pre-flight Check List

28

You might also like