Design For Quality & Product Excellence
Design For Quality & Product Excellence
Design For Quality & Product Excellence
• Customer Platform Teams are one of the focal points for identifying
- customer requirements
- building and maintaining new business,
- product offerings, and customer relationships.
• Customer Driven
• Reduces Implementation Time
• Promotes Teamwork
• Provides Documentation
TOYOTA’S EXPERIENCE
• Introduced in 1977.
• By 1979 cost of introducing new product
reduced by 20%
• By 1984 cost reduced by 61% & time reduced
by 33%
• Quality improved ( almost eliminated rust
related warranty issues )
HOUSE OF QUALITY
• QFD uses a set of linked matrixes to ensure that
the VOC is carried through the design,
manufacturing & product delivery process
• Six steps to build House of Quality
1. Voice of customer
2. Identify technical requirements
3. Relate the customer requirement to technical
requirements
HOUSE OF QUALITY
4. Evaluation of competing products
5. Evaluate technical requirements & develop
targets
6. Determine which of the technical
requirements to deploy in the remainder of
the production/delivery process
The Four Linked Houses of Quality
Axiomatic Design
Interrelationships Customer
requirement
priorities
Technical requirements
Voice of
Relationship
the
matrix
customer
Technical requirement
Competitive
priorities
evaluation
House Of Quality
Interrelationship
between
Technical Descriptors
Technical Descriptors
(Voice of the organization)
Requirements
Requirements
(Voice of the
Prioritized
Customer)
Customer
Customer
Relationship between
Requirements and
Descriptors
Prioritized Technical 3
Descriptors
Besterfield, Mech. Eng.
QFD Matrix Relationship between
Technical
Descriptors
Customer Requirements
and
Primary
Technical Descriptors
Interrelationship between
Secondary
WHATs vs. HOWs
Technical Descriptors
(correlation matrix) +9 Strong
Secondary
HOWs vs. HOWs +3 Medium
Primary
+1 Weak
+9 Strong Positive
+3 Positive
Requirements
-3 Negative
Requirements
Prioritized
Customer
Customer
-9 Strong Negative
Technical Our
Competitive A’s
Our
B’s
Assessment B’s
A’s
Absolute Weight
Scale-up Factor
Degree of Technical Difficulty
Target Value
Target Value
Assessment
Competitive
Sales Point
Importance
Customer
Customer
Absolute Weight and Percent
Relative Weight and Percent
Prioritized Technical
3
Descriptors
Secondary
Primary
Tertiary
Customer Requirements
(WHATs)
Secondary
Primary
Tertiary
Technical Descriptors
(HOWs)
Secondary
Secondary
Primary
Requirements
Customer
Secondary Secondary
Primary
Relationship between
Customer
Requirements and
Requirements
Technical Descriptors
Customer
+9 Strong
+3 Medium
+1 Weak
Relationship between
Customer Requirements
and
Requirements
Technical Descriptors
Customer
+9 Strong
+3 Medium
+1 Weak
4
5
3
Requirements
Relationship between
1
Customer
Customer Requirements
2
and
5 Technical Descriptors
1 WHATs vs. HOWs
4
4 +9 Strong
+3 Medium
+1 Weak
Ours
Assessment B’s
Competitive A’s
Customer
5
3
Requirements
Relationship between
Customer
1
Customer Requirements
2
and
5 Technical Descriptors
1 WHATs vs. HOWs
4
4 +9 Strong
+3 Medium
Technical Our 1 3 4 2 1 2 1 4
+1 Weak
Competitive A’s
Assessment B’s
Our
B’s
A’s
Assessment
Competitive
Customer
+9 Strong
+3 Medium
5 7 5 1.2
3 3 3 1.5 +1 Weak
Requirements
Requirements
1 9 2
Prioritized
1
Customer
Customer
2 10 3 1.5 1 15
5 2 5 1 1.5 3
1 4 2 1
4 8 4 1.5
4 1 4 1
Technical Our 1 3 4 21 2 1 4
Competitive A’s
Our
B’s
Assessment B’s
A’s
Absolute Weight
Scale-up Factor
Target Value
Assessment
Competitive
Sales Point
Importance
Customer
Customer
n
b Rd
j ij i
i 1
R is Relationship Matrix
D is Customer Absolute
Weights
DEPLOYMENT
• Identify the following Technical requirements
1. With strong correlation with customer
needs
2. Poor competitive performance
3. Selling points
• These are priority technical requirements
• Required to be deployed throughout the rest
of the design & manufacturing process
Relationship between
Technical
Descriptors
Customer Requirements
and
Primary
Technical Descriptors
Interrelationship between
Secondary
WHATs vs. HOWs
Technical Descriptors
(correlation matrix) +9 Strong
Secondary
HOWs vs. HOWs +3 Medium
Primary
+1 Weak
+9 Strong Positive
5 7 5 1.2
+3 Positive
3 3 3 1.5
Requirements
-3 Negative
Requirements
1 9 2
Prioritized
1
Customer
Customer
Technical Our 1 3 4 21 2 1 4
Competitive A’s
Our
B’s
Assessment B’s
A’s
Absolute Weight
Scale-up Factor
Degree of Technical Difficulty 1 8 4 2 9 8 2 5
Target Value
Target Value 2 3 4 31 3 1 5
Assessment
Competitive
Sales Point
Importance
Customer
Customer
Absolute Weight and Percent 90
Relative Weight and Percent 133
Prioritized Technical
5
Descriptors
Engineering Characteristics
Pathogen Removal
Wax Removal
Customer Importance to
Selling Points
Requirements Customer
Brand 2
Taste 5
Appearance 5
Price 3
Germ-free 4
Pesticide-free 3
Convenience 3
Importance Weighting 4 4 2 5 5 3 4
Target Values 5 4 5 5 5 3 4
Deployment
RELIABILITY
• Essential customer quality requirement for
sophisticated products in many sectors (eg.
Health Care, satellite communication,
Aircrafs)
• Competitive advantage
• Quality dimension
Design for Reliability
• RELIABILITY is defined as the probability that a product, piece of
equipment, or system performs its intended function for a stated period of
time or usage under specified operating conditions.
• Reliability is the probability that a product will not fail over a given period of
time/usage.
• Key elements:
– Probability
– Performance
– Time
– Operating conditions ( Environment)
Types of Failures
• Functional failure – failure that occurs at the
start of product life due to manufacturing or
material detects
• Reliability failure – failure afer some period of
use
• 1. Does not work at all
• 2. Operation is unstable
• 3. Performance deteriorates
Reliability
• For defined environment & performance
characteristics, product & processes can be designed
and reliability estimated
• Inherent reliability is the predicted reliability
determined by the design of the product or process.
• Achieved reliability is the actual reliability observed
during use.
• Achieved reliability can be less than the inherent
reliability due to the effects of the manufacturing
process and the conditions of use.
Estimation of Reliability
• Reliability is determined by the number of
failures per unit time during the duration
under consideration (called the failure rate, λ).
– For items that must be replaced when a failure
occurs, the reciprocal of the failure rate (having
dimensions of time units per failure) is called the
mean time to failure (MTTF).
– For repairable items, the mean time between
failures (MTBF) is used.
Computing the Failure Rate
MTTF/ MTBF
•
• Φ=
• 10 units are tested over a 100hr period. Four
units failed with 1 unit each failing afer
6,35,65,70 hours; the remaining 6 units
performed satisfactorily until the end of the
test. What is the failure rate?
Example
Product Life Characteristics Curve
Product Life Characteristics Curve
• Many electronic components commonly
exhibit a high, but decreasing, failure rate
early in their lives, followed by a period of a
relatively constant failure rate, and ending
with an increasing failure rate.
RELIABILITY FUNCTION
• Reliability is the probability that a product will not fail
over a given period of time
• This is expressed by the “Reliability Function”
• Reliability Function is expressed as R(T).
• R(0)=1
• As T assumes a large value , R(T) does not increase
• R(T) = 1 – F(T)
• F(T) is the cumulative probability distribution of failure
• A product’s reliability function helps in defining warranty
period
EXAMPLE
• A tire manufacturer wants to establish its
warranty policy. It has data that the life of tire
has a normal distribution with average value
of 50000 km and sd of 1500 km. What is the
probability that the tire will not wear out
before 48000 kms?
RELIABILITY FUNCTION
CUMULATIVE PROBABILITY FUNCTION FOR
FAILURES
• During the useful period of life of products
the failure rate is assumed to be constant
• The failure over time has been established to
follow an exponential probability distribution
• Empirically validated for many repairable and
non repairable products
Exponential Reliability
• Exponential probability density function of failures
f(t) = le-lt for t ≥ 0
• Probability of failure from (0, T)
F(T) = 1 – e-lT
• Probability of failure during the interval (t1 , t2)
F(t2) - F(t1) = e-λ(t2 –t1)
• Reliability function (probability of survival)
R(T) = 1 – F(T) = e-lT
EXAMPLE
• 10 units are tested over a 100hr period. Four
units failed with 1 unit each failing afer
6,35,65,70 hours; the remaining 6 units
performed satisfactorily until the end of the
test. What is the Reliability function? Draw a
chart of R(T) for different values of T.
Using the MTTF
• For non repairable items, θ = 1/λ is defined as
the mean time to failure (MTTF). For
exponential assumptions:
EXAMPLE
• An electronic component has a failure rate of
0.0001 per hour. Calculate the MTTF. What is
the probability that the component will not
fail in 15000hrs.
Example
System Reliability
• Series system: all components must function
or the system will fail.
– the reliability of the system is the product of the
individual reliabilities
EXAMPLE
• A personal computer system is composed of
the processing unit, graphics board, and key
board with reliabilities of 0.997, 0.980 and
0.975 respectively.
• What is the reliability of the system?
Example 7.11
RELIABILITY WITH EXPONENTIAL FAILURE
RATE
EXAMPLE
• A system uses 2 components with exponential
failure rates of 0.004 & 0.001 . What is the
Reliability of the system?
• What is the probability of it surviving for 100
hrs?
PARRALEL SYSTEM
System Reliability
• Parallel system: uses redundancy.
The system will successfully operate
as long as one component functions.
– The reliability is calculated as
• Example 7.14
Series-Parallel Systems
• To compute the reliability of systems with both
series and parallel components, decompose the
system into smaller series and/or parallel subsets
of component, compute the reliabilities of these
subsets, and continue until you are lef with a
simple series or parallel system.
Example 7.15
98
Example 7.15 (continued)
101
Design for Reliability