Downtime Reduction Driven by Evaluation of Material Unavailability
Resumen
In the manufacturing & life-sciences
industry, increased competition has forced a cost-reduction philosophy in what was once a highly
profitable business. Manufacturers now need to
maintain or improve time to market and quality
while keeping low costs. For this reason,
manufacturing firms are now focusing on
improving their processes to reduce sources of
waste, including the waste of downtime in
manufacturing processes. When a manufacturing
process stops for an unplanned event it creates
downtime. It is particularly important to define the
difference between downtime and small process
interruptions. For this design project, we define
downtime as any unplanned stop that is five
minutes or longer. For most manufacturers
downtime is the single largest source of lost
production time. It receives a high level of attention
if productivity is affected due to material
unavailability, especially when they estimate their
downtime or manually record downtimes for each
occurrence. This paper presents the process
improvement using the DMAIC approach. DMAIC
proved to be the most preferred technique for the
defect identification and process improvement by
use of various tools. As a result, the efficiency of
the process will increase by the reduction of
downtime up to 20%.
Key Terms - Downtime, DMAIC, Lean
Manufacturing, Six Sigma