精益生产中英文互译讲课教案
某公司精益生产培训教材(中英文)
5年生产效率的提高
52% 的提高
Electronic & Electrical
Industrial Equipment
Handtools and Hardware
Controls & Measuring
3.00% 2.50% 2.00% 1.50% 1.00% 0.50% 0.00% -0.50% -1.00%
0
Electronic &
Industrial
Handtools and
Controls &
Electrical
按时交货 Equipment
Hardware
Measuring
12
10
8
6
44%的提高
4
2
0
Electronic & Electrical
Industrial
Handtools and
Controls &
The amount of human effort, time, space, tools, and inventories can typically be cut in half very quickly, and steady progress can be maintained from this point onward to cut inputs in half again within a few years.
➢ Toyota Production System丰田制造系统
➢ _____ Production System______ 制造系统
➢ etc?..
等等…...
Lean Manufacturing - Key Characteristics 精益制造 - 关键特性
精益生产介绍课程教材
• 零浪费
Zero Tolerance for Waste
• 稳定的制造环境
A Stable Production Environment
• 客户拉动/即时供货
Customer “Pull” / Just-in-Time
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从经济学角度来看...
Basic Economics
Flextronics Corporate Presentation 2024/3/23
成本+利润=价格
Cost + Profit = Price
市场决定价格-制造商控制成本=利润
Market Determined Price - Producer Controlled Cost = Profit
损失生产时间用于寻找材料和工具; 由于障碍物及其他潜在的危险因素造成安 全隐患; 环境脏乱,造成次品及设备损坏; 差的客户响应性和可能产生送货差错; 难以辨别“好与差”或“需要与不需要”.
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什么是5S?
Flextronics Corporate Presentation 2024/3/23
1S-Separate & Scrap /分离与丢弃 2S-Straighten/整理 3S-Scrub/清洁 4S-Standardize & Spread 标准化和推广 5S-Systemize /系统化
主要事项
1
中国 2
第一
3 4
5
提高工作积极性及业务能力(发展目标)
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员工参与 第二步
Flextronics Corporate Presentation 2024/3/23
精益生产之全面生产维护__TPM(中英文双语版).
脑力风暴 拉系统 减少设置 TPM 流程图 标杆管理 亲和图 DOE 假设检验 力场分析图 树状图 甘特图
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查检表 运行图 柱状图 散布图 控制图 柏拉图 互动回顾 愚巧法
Revised 1-12-02
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Lean Six Sigma Improvement Process Road Map
定义
• • • • •
测量
• • • • • •
分析
• • • • •
改进
• • • • •
控制
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选定题目 列出客户 从顾客之声中列出关建需 求 定出项目焦点和重要指标 完成 PDF
绘制业务流程图 绘制价值流程图 制定数据收集计划 测量系统分析 收集数据 过程能力分析
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提出关键因子 区分关键因子 验证关键因子 评枯每个关键因子对结果 的影响 量化机会 根本原因排序 寻找根本原因针对关键因 子
Define
• • •
Measure
• • • •
Analyze
• • • • •
Improve
• • • • •
Control
• • • • • • •
• •
Identify Problem Develop List of Customers Develop List of CTQ’s from Voicoject Focus and Key Metrics Complete PDF
关键因子确认 发掘潜在的解决方法 选择方案 优化方案 实行方案
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过程变革和控制 制定控制计划 计算最终财务 过程指标 项目过渡给未来项目管理者 项目鉴 别 转化机会
(精益生产)精益生产方式简介(中英文翻译)
精益生产方式简介摘要:精益生产是一种起源于丰田和汽车制造的流水线制造方法论。
也被称为“丰田生产系统”。
精益生产的目标被描述为“在适当的时间(或第仪式间,the first time)使适当的东西到达适当的地点,同时使浪费最小化和适应变化”。
创立了精益生产原则的大野耐一发现他的方法论不但可以减小浪费,还能够增进产品流动和提高质量。
本文对精益生产进行了具体的分析,得出它的优越性,并把它与传统的生产方式进行比较,通过分析可以知道精益生产是解救困难企业的法宝。
关键词:丰田汽车,精益生产,优越性,特点,企业一、丰田公司的精益生产方式精益生产(Lean Production,简称LP)是美国麻省理工学院数位国际汽车计划组织(IMVP)的专家对日本“丰田JIT(Justin Time)生产方式”的赞誉之称,精,即少而精,不投入多余的生产要素,只是在适当的时间生产必要数量的市场急需产品(或下道工序急需的产品);益,即所有经营活动都要有益有效,具有经济性。
精益生产是当前工业界最佳的一种生产组织体系和方式。
精益生产是战后日本汽车工业遭到的“资源稀缺”和“多品种、少批量”的市场制约的产物,它是从丰田相佐诘开始,经丰田喜一郎及大野耐一等人的共同努力直到60年代才逐步完善而形成的。
精益生产既是一种以最大限度地减少企业生产所占用的资源和降低企业管理和运营成本为主要目标的生产方式,同时它又是一种理念,一种文化。
实施精益生产就是决心追求完美的历程,也是追求卓越的过程,它是支撑个人与企业生命的一种精神力量,也是在永无止境的学习过程中获得自我满足的一种境界。
其目标是精益求精,尽善尽美,永无止境的追求七个零的终极目标。
精益生产的实质是管理过程,包括人事组织管理的优化,大力精简中间管理层,进行组织扁平化改革,减少非直接生产人员;推进行生产均衡化同步化,实现零库存与柔性生产;推行全生产过程(包括整个供应链)的质量保证体系,实现零不良;减少和降低任何环节上的浪费,实现零浪费;最终实现拉动式准时化生产方式。
精益生产方式JIT教案
· JIT的生产理念 · JIT 的含义 ·JIT 的基本内容 ·JIT 的运行要求 · MRP 与 JIT 比较 ·MRP与 JIT 的集成 · 精益生产方式
001
一、JIT的生产理念
企业现有生产能力= 产出 + 浪费
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二、JIT 的含义 ( Just in Time ) “ 对需要的物品, 在需要的时候,只按需要的量生
但这并不是意味着双卡系统就一定比单卡系 统有更多的在制品库存。当几个后道工序使用同 种零件时,将缓冲在制品主要存放在前道工序将 是更经济、更灵活的措施。
在实践中,究竟是选择单卡系统还是双卡 系统,要视企业的实际情况而定。
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四、 JIT 的运行特点
1. “推” 2. 送货制 3. 大批量
“拉” 取货制
求2400件 240件
24件
24件 007
( 四) 现场管理----看板理
又称“ 拉式” 生产控制系统, 即由后道工 向前序道工序发布生产指令. 前道工序根据后道
工序的生产指令组织生产. “ 拉式 ” 生产控 制 系统所采用的生产指令形式, 就是“ 看板” .
1. 看板
所谓“看板”。是一种永久性卡片,上面记 录 着:零件名称、零件号码标准盛装箱容量,前道 工序、后道工序等信息。为了清楚地显示作业完 成情况,有时还涂有不同的颜色,以利辨认。
产 原下半 修改后下 修改后日 修改后48 修改前48分 品 月需求(1) 半月需求(2) 平均产出(3) 分钟产出(4) 钟产出(4)
A 600
600
60
6
6
B 200
600
60
6
2
C 800
400
40
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An outline of:Lean Thinking Banish Waste and Create Wealth in YourCorporationBy James P. Womack and Daniel T. JonesNew York, NY: Free Press, Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1996, Second Edition, 2003 Preface to the 2003 Edition. Forecasts are always wrong. That is why lean thinkersstrive to reduce order-to-delivery time. During the 2002 meltdown, this 1996 book went back on the Business Week bestseller list. We have added what we have learned since 1996 in this edition. Lean Thinking is more relevant today. Lean ideas are the single most powerful tool available for creating value and eliminating waste in any organization.Part I: Lean PrinciplesTaiichi Ohno (1912 – 1990), a Toyota executive, identified seven types of waste found in any process:• Transportation. Unnecessary transport of parts under production.• Inventory. Stacks of parts waiting to be completed or finished products waiting to be shipped.• Motion. Unnecessary movement of people working on products.• Waiting. Unnecessary waiting by people to begin the next step.• Over-Processing the product with extra steps.• Over-Production of products not needed.• Defects in the product.We have added an eighth waste: goods and services that do not meet the customer’s needs. Other authors have added: underutilization of peopleLean Thinking is the antidote to waste. There are (5) Lean Principles:• Specify Value. Value can be defined only by the ultimate customer. Value is distorted by pre-existing organizations, especially engineers and experts. They add complexity of no interest to the customer.• Identify the Value Stream. The Value Stream is all the actions needed to bring a product to the customer. If the melter, forger, machiner, and assembler never talk,duplicate steps will exist.• Flow. Make the value-creating steps flow. Eliminate departments that execute a single-task process on large batches.• Pull. Let the customer pull the product from you. Sell, one. Make one.• Pursue Perfection. There is no end to the process of reducing time, space, cost and mistakes.Lean is doing more with less. Use the least amount of effort, energy, equipment, time, facility space, materials, and capital – while giving customers exactly what they want.The Prize We Can Grasp Now. Converting a batch-and-queue system to continuous flow, with pull, will:Double labor productivity• Cut throughput time by 90%• Reduce inventory by 90%• Cut errors by 50%• Cut injuries1: ValueA House or a Hassle-Free Experience? Doyle Wilson Homebuilder found that customers “valued” a hassle-free design process and on-time delivery. All his processes were thenre-aligned to meet this goal.Define Value in Terms of the Whole Product. As the product flows, each firm defines value differently. Think of air travel. Each firm – agent, airline, taxi, currency exchange, customs, immigration – defines their own priorities, duplicates efforts, and works in disharmony with the whole process. The customer is not satisfied.2: The Value StreamThe View from the Aisle. A value stream “map” identifies every action to design, order, and make a specific product. Each step is then sorted into three categories: (1) those that add value, (2) those that add no value but are currently necessary, and (3) those that add no value and can be eliminated. After the third category has been eliminated, the second category should be addressed through flow, pull, and perfection techniques.The Value Stream for a Carton of Cola. The British grocery chain Tesco retails products with thousands of value streams. In the canned cola value stream, three hours of value-added activity take 319 days to perform.3: FlowThe World of Batch-and-Queue. Five-sixths of home-building is waiting for the next set of specialists or rework. Flow principles typically cut half the effort and the time required.The Techniques of Flow. The 1st step is to maintain focus on the product. The 2nd step is to ignore job boundaries and departments IOT remove impediments to continuous flow of the specific product. The 3rd step is to rethink work practices to eliminate backflow, scrap, and stoppages IOT make the product continuously.• Takt time synchronizes the rate of production to the rate of sales. (48) bikes per day sold divided by (8) hours of production = (6) bikes and hour, or (1) bike every tenminutes.• Flow requires all workers and machines to be capable at all times. This requires cross-training.• Flow requires workers to know the status of production at all times. This requires visual controls.• All activities can flow. Concentrate on the value stream for a specific product, eliminateorganizational barriers, and relocate and right-size tools.4: PullPull means that no one upstream should produce anything until the customer downstream asks for it. “Don’t make anything until it is needed, then make it very quickly.” “Sell one, buy one.” “Ship one, make one.”The Bad Old Days of Production. The Toyota bumper replacement system suffered long lead times. The ability to get parts quickly from the next upstream producer enabled re-orders in small amounts. This is the secret to reducing inventory. Cut lead times and inventories. Demand should instantly generate new supply.5: PerfectionThe Incremental Path. Freudenberg-NOK, a gasket manufacturer, improved a single process six times in three years. “Why didn’t they get is right the first time?” Because perfection is continuous.Continuous Radical and Incremental Improvement. If you are spending capital, you are doing it wrong. Once leaders understand the first four lean principles – value specification, value stream identification, flow, andpull – their perfection step starts with policy: a vision of the ideal process, and the step-wise goals and projects to get there. Transparency is everything. Everyone must know what you are attempting to achieve and what area is the first priority. The force behind this is the leader known as the change agent.Part II: From Thinking to Action: The Lean Leap6: The Simple CaseLantech manufacturers stretch wrap mach ines. “Process Villages” – Sawing department, Machining department, Welding department, Painting department, and Sub-assembly department – all generated long lead times. Batches of ten were manufactured to ship one. Inventory overwhelmed the factory. Order changes created havoc in the plant. “The more inventory you have, the less likely you will have the part you need.”• The Lean Revolution. Ron Hicks leaned Lantech. He created four cells, one for each product. He defined standard work: on time, on spec, every time. Takt time wasintroduced: number of products needed per day divided by number of hours (8/8 = 1hour). He right-sized machines to fit inside work cells. He implemented quickchangeover to make multiple different parts with little machine downtime.• Result. Lantech cut 30% excess space, doubled product output, cut defects from 8 per product to 0.8 per product, and cut lead time from sixteen weeks to fourteen hours.On-time shipping rose from 20 to 90%.7: A Harder CaseThe Change Agent. Art Byrne was hired as CEO of Wiremold in 1991. “CEOs are timid to change the shop floor.” Byrne led lean training using a manual he wrote himself. He led toursof the plant to observe waste that his managers were now able to see.• Improvements Must be Fast. Three days was Byrne’s standard.• Post a Scorecard for Each Product Team. Wiremold tracked: Productivity – sales per employee, Service – percent delivered on-time, Inventory – turns, and Quality –mistakes.• Teach People How to See. Create a lean training function. Teach all employees the five principles of lean: Value, Value Stream, Flow, Pull, and Perfection. Teach allemployees lean techniques: standard work, takt time, visual control, pull scheduling,and single-piece flow.• Results. Wiremold freed 50% factory floor space, eliminated a warehouse, and converted $11M of inventory into $24M in sales. Lead time fell from four weeks totwo days.8: The Acid TestPratt & Whitney (P&W). In 1991, CEO Karl Krapek and cost-cutter Mark Coran leanedP&W.• Jet Engines. Founded in 1860, P&W led the aircraft engine business by 1929. When they abandoned piston engines to gamble on jets in 1946, business soared. Production inefficiencies were overlooked.• Overcapacity. Faced with competition in the 1980s, P&W rationalized plant layout and addressed development costs. They needed lower production costs and flexibility toreact to customer needs. Why did P&W need so much space, tools, inventory andpeople to get so little done? Daily output of engines and spare parts could fit insideCEO’s office. Failure to manage assets. P&W cut people, cut managers, andoverhauled their entire production culture and processes.• The Monument of all Monuments. A “monument” is a machine or process too big to be moved and whose scale requires operating in batch mode. Monuments are evil, generating huge amounts of waste. P&W had an $80M grinding system, representing obsolete thinking. Although speeding up grinding from 75 minutes to 3 minutes and eliminating multiple manual grinding jobs, in actuality grinding jobs took longer (due to eight-hour changeovers and batch scheduling), and required more people (22 computer technicians). P&W retired the $80M monument, returned to 75-minute production.9: Lean Thinking versus German TechnikPorche. Chairman Wendelin Wiedeking introduced lean thinking to Porche. In 1994, the first-ever Porsche rolled off the line with nothing wrong with it.• Engineers. Porche is led by engineers, intrigued with unique solutions that are difficult to manufacture. Workers are craftsmen. Unfortunately, much craftsmanship is waste.Tinkering with the product – repairing and polishing raw materials, troubleshooting,re-assembling elements, repainting and re-fitting – were thought to be necessaryactivities to produce a high-quality product.• Crisis. 1986 was the boom year. 1992 was the crash. Porche products were tooexpensive. Costs and throughput time had to be slashed. New quality focus: “Stopfixing mistakes that should never have been made.” Reduction in inventory: “Whereis the factory? This is the warehouse!”• Just-in-Time (JIT) Game. Porche asked all their suppliers to play a simulation to learn lean concepts. Lean concepts were critical across all firms contributing to the Porche value stream.• The Remarkable Lean Transition at Porche. In five years, through 1997, Porch doubled its productivity, cut manufacturing space in half, cut lead time for a finished vehicle from six weeks to three days, cut supplier defects 90%, cut inventories 90%,and cut first-time-through errors by 55%.• The German Tradition. The Germans need to stop prioritizing the engineer’s definition of value, “voice of the engineer,” over the customer’s definition of value,“voice of the customer.” A German weakness is a fondness for monster machines that produce large batches: paint booths are an example.• Variety and Refinement Cost. Volkswagen makes four exterior mirrors, nineteen parts each, in seventeen colors. Nissan has four-part mirrors in four colors. Excess varietyoften exceeds the ability of the customer to notice, and his willingness to pay.10: Mighty Toyota; Tiny ShowaShowa has been transformed by its relationship with Toyota. Showa, a radiator manufacturer, had “Process villages” for casting, cleaning, stampin g, welding, painting and assembly. Each was run in batch mode with long intervals between tool changes. Mountains of parts were transported and stored between steps.• The Initial Struggle. Taiichi Ohno, lean advisor, promised to reduce three months ofinventory to three days, double labor productivity, and halve plant space for zerocapital investment. This he did.• The Final Element: Rethinking Order-Taking and Scheduling. Showa then leanedorder-taking by scheduling backwards, working to takt time, to synchronize orderswith production slots, exactly four days before shipment time. Orders with incorrectinformation were never passed along.• Toyota Today. Lesson: high-tech automation only works if the plant can run at 100percent output and if the cost of indirect technical support and high-tech tools is lessthan the cost of direct labor saved.Part III: Lean Enterprise11: A Channel for the Stream; a Valley for the ChannelThe Lean Enterprise. No one watches the performance of the whole value stream. Identify all actions to bring a product to the customer, across all firms. There is no privacy. Eachfirm’s costs become transparent.12: Dreaming About PerfectionLong-Distance Travel. Each organization ignores the role of the other parties. The time, cost, and comfort of the total trip are key performance measures. What would travel times be without queues?Construction. 80% of home building is hurry-up and wait, then re-working the construction errors.The Prize We Can Grasp Right Now. Lean thinking can boost productivity while reducing errors, inventories, accidents, space requirements, production lead times, and costs in general. Lean thinking requires little capital.Part IV: Epilogue13: A Steady Advance of Lean ThinkingThis chapter an updated review of Wiremold, Toyota, Porsche, Lantech, and Pratt & Whitney.14: Institutionalizing the RevolutionAn Enhanced Action Plan is the 2003 update to the 1996 plan from Chapter 11.Getting Started [Months 1 – 6]• Find a Change Agent with ability and authority.• Get the Knowledge through an advisor. Start at the big picture before addressing small steps.• Seize a Crisis or create one. Focus on fixing an obvious problem. Small wins. Don’t spend money.• Map your current value streams. Managers need to see. Map also the flow of information going upstream to create a closed circuit. See Rother and Shook, Leaning to See, 1998.• Analyze each step of the Current State. Does this step create value? Is this step capable, available, flexible? Is capacity sufficient? Excessive? Does theinformation flow from the customer smoothly? Every process has a box score:total lead time, value creating time, changeover time, uptime, rework, inventory,every part made every x minutes. If this step went away, what would happen?• Envision the Future State. Draw it.• Begin as soon as possible with an important, visible activity. Convert managers with hand-on activity.• Demand Immediate Results. Everyone should see results which create psychological momentum. One week: less planning, more doing. Identify the waste and remove it.Communicate with your people by showing results at the scene of action.Creating an Organization to Channel Your Streams [Months 6 – 24]• Reorganize Your Firm by product and value streams. Put a Change Agent in charge of each product.• Create a Lean Promotion Team.• Deal with Excess People Early.• Devise a Growth Strategy.• Remove the Anchor Draggers.• When You’ve Fixed Something, Fix It Again.• New: Convince Your Suppliers and Customers to Take the Steps Just Described.Install Business Systems to Encourage Lean Thinking [Months 24 – 48]Create new ways to keep score.• Create new ways to reward people.• Make everything transparent so everyone can see progress.• Teach lean. Learn lean.• Right-size Your Tools to insert directly into the value stream. Large and fast is more efficient but less effective. This wrong assumption is the cornerstone ofbatch-and-queue thinking.• Pay a bonus. Tie bonus amount to the profitability of the firm.Completing the Transformation [Months 48 – 60] Convert to bottom-up initiatives. Lean ideas are democratic and not top-down. Layers of management can be stripped away.New: Convert From Top-Down Leadership to Bottom-Up Initiatives. Toyota gets brilliant results from average managers using brilliant procedures. Competitors get mediocre results from brilliant managers using mediocre procedures. Don’t search for brilliant managers. Perfect your processes.Reviewer’s CommentsIn 1988 James Womack first described Toyota as a “lean” corporation. Womack and co-writer Daniel Jones described the Toyota Production System (TPS) in The Machine That Changed the World. In 1990, the two toured companies in Europe, North American, and Japan presenting ideas on how to convert mass production practices to lean practices. Lean Thinking, first published in 1996, is a survey of the lean movement. It clearly describes the waste found in mass production, explains the five principles of lean thinking, and then draws lessons from real companies who have successfully implemented lean ideas. Lean Thinking is not a technical how-to text on production, but an enlightened overview of top-level lean ideas and applications. This updated edition includes lessons that the authors have collected between 1996 and 2003, especially the concept of a lean enterprise – a collection of companies working lean together to produce a single product with the least wasted effort and capital. The book is well-written, researched, and organized, and the authors make a strong case that lean is universal and will benefit any organization in any endeavor. Lean thinking and practices are the single most powerful tool for eliminating waste in any organization.中文翻译概述精益思想去除浪费,并在贵公司创造财富由詹姆斯P.沃麦克和丹尼尔T.琼斯纽约编写,纽约:自由出版社,西蒙与舒斯特公司,1996年。