Lecture 4: Overview
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Value Stream Mapping
Present State Map
Process Improvement Strategies
Takt Time
Future State Value Stream Map
Principles for Implementing Lean Manufacturing
Value Stream
Helps
us see where value is created, and where waste exists:
Mapping
Developed by product family
Shows flow of both material &
information.
Helps us see where/how specific Lean
tools can be used to improve flow and
eliminate waste
Consists of two types of maps:
Present State (how it is)
Future State (how it should be)
Value Stream Mapping
Present State Value Stream Map
Value Stream Mapping
The Process Box
Indicates basic production process.
One box for each major material flow, not for
each processing step.
Process disconnection and inventory
accumulation are indicators of where processes
are separated.
Value Stream Mapping
The Data Box
The Data Box stores process information
Cycle Time (C/T). Rate at which a part or product is completed by a process.
Changeover Time (C/O). Amount of time to switch from one product type to another.
Uptime. Measure of machine use (100% = Always running).
Every Part Every (EPE). Measure of batch sizes and changeover cycles.
Available Work Time. Per shift of a process (in seconds, minus break, meeting, and
cleanup times.)
- Quality Level. % First time yield.
- Number of Operators. Required personnel for a process.
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Value Stream Mapping
Inventory Triangle and Push Movement Arrow
An Inventory Triangle captures the location and
amount of inventory
A striped arrow indicates a Push movement of
inventory according to a predefined schedule
Value Stream Mapping
Lead Time Bars
Lead time indicates total time for a process or
series of process.
- Production/Manufacturing Lead Time (MLT). Lead time through entire production.
- Process Lead Time. Lead time though each process, including time in inventory.
Calculated as inventory quantity divided by daily customer requirement.
- Processing Time = Value Added Time. Actual time spent processing the part or
product.
- Used to highlight inefficiencies
(7000 pcs)/(28400 pcs/month)x(20 workdays/month)
Value Stream Mapping
Present State Value Stream Map
Value Stream Mapping
Map Features
1:
2:
3:
4:
5:
Document customer demand
Define processes w/operation data
Show material flow
Show information flow
Compute lead times
Value Stream Mapping
Questions Part 1
1. Are there any symbols on the map that
you dont recognize?
2. What determines the work schedule at
each station?
3. How is time data in the map acquired?
4. What is the bottleneck in the ACME
manufacturing process?
5. Where is the biggest changeover time?
What does this mean for downstream
processes?
Value Stream Mapping
Questions Part 2
1. What is the manufacturing lead time for
a product (definition and value)? How
does that compare to the value added
time?
2. What is the impact of 1 truck a day
leaving with finished goods and trucks
arriving on Tuesday and Thursday with
coils of steel?
Value Stream Mapping
Questions Part 3
1. Where do you see waste in this process
and what types of waste from the
mnemonic CLOSED MITT do you see?
2. What countermeasures could be taken
to reduce the most significant forms of
waste?
Value Stream Mapping
Mapping Methodology
Focus on a product family within
single plant.
Seek leadership from the value
stream manager.
Go and see. Conduct door-to-door
process walk.
Work backwards, starting at the
shipping door.
Capture and quantify basic
operations involved.
Value Stream Mapping
Investigation
Etiquette
Get management approval
Communicate to all areas before
visit
Make introductions when you get
there
Remember, the workers are the
experts for their tasks!
Respect peoples work space
Explain your purpose
Value Stream Mapping
Strategies for Process
Improvement
#1: Produce to your Takt Time.
#2: Develop continuous flow
where possible
to reduce inventory.
Eliminate isolated
islands of production.
#3: Use supermarkets to control
production
where continuous flow does
not extend
upstream (often outside the
plant).
#4: Try to send customer
Value Stream Mapping
schedule to only
Establish Takt Time
Synchronizes pace of production to match pace
of sales.
Takt Time = Demand Rate
Takt Time =
Work Time Available
Number of Units Sold
900 Seconds
= 10.6 Sec/Board
85 Boards
Cycle Time
= Minimum # of People
Takt Time
Takt Time =
GOAL: Produce to Demand
Value Stream Mapping
Supermarket Pull System
Used to control production where continuous flow
does not extend upstream.
Example Reasons for Supermarkets:
- Process that operate at very fast or slow cycle times and need to change over to
serve multiple product families
- Some processes, such as those at supplies, are far away and shipping one piece at a
time does not make sense.
- Some processes have too much lead time or are too unreliable to couple directly to
other processes in a continuous flow.
Value Stream Mapping
Pacemaker Process
A pacemaker process is single point in the manufacturing
value stream that sets the production pace for the entire
process.
The pacemaker process is frequently the most
downstream continuous-flow process.
On the future-state map, the pacemaker
process is the
Load-leveling
production process that is controlled by
the outside
means
distributing
customers orders.
the production of
different products
evenly over a time
period, creating a
product mix.
The schedule
should create an
initial pull by
releasing and
withdrawing a
small, consistent
increment of work,
called the Pitch.
Value Stream Mapping
Questions Part 4
1. What is the companys Takt time if the
demand is 460 parts per 8 hour shift
(with two 10 minute breaks)?
2. Where is it not practical to achieve
continuous flow? How could a
supermarket be used to overcome this?
3. How can the welding and assembly
operations be configured to Takt time?
4. What should be the pacemaker
process?
5. What other improvements are possible?
Value Stream Mapping
Future State Value Stream Map
Value Stream Mapping