1 / 80

Equipment Efficiency: Availability, P erformance and M aintenance

Equipment Efficiency: Availability, P erformance and M aintenance. Operations Analysis and Improvement 2010 Fall Dr. Tai-Yue Wang Industrial and Information Management Department National Cheng Kung University. Presentation.

loring
Télécharger la présentation

Equipment Efficiency: Availability, P erformance and M aintenance

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Equipment Efficiency:Availability, Performanceand Maintenance Operations Analysis and Improvement 2010 Fall Dr. Tai-Yue Wang Industrial and Information Management Department National Cheng Kung University

  2. Presentation • The role of maintenance is to insure the survivability and proper functioning of all company hardware. • Most maintenance departments are considered “a necessary evil”. • Investments required to improve production processes usually take on a low priority.

  3. Presentation • Maintenance evolution, as well as maintenance technique evolution, has developed in parallel for many companies. • Remediate hardware failures. • Prevent future problems with the equipment. • Incorporate basic maintenance tasks into their daily production routine. • Predicting equipment breakdowns.

  4. Introduction • Maintenance’s primary objective is to maintain, at a high operative level, the productive resources in order to assure their service at an expected cost. • Maintenance is the “machine’s medicine”. • Determine the right moment to replace the equipment. • It may be better to simply unplug it.

  5. Thinking revolution The 5S Visual Control Workforce optimization Standard operations Poka-Yoke Jidoka 1 20 11 12 9 TPM One-Piece flow Multi- functional workers 7 16 5 14 Leveling Production Kanban SMED 4 6 17 8 JUST IN TIME 15 18 19 13 10 3 2 Introduction • Elements that need maintenance. • Machines and tools. • Facilities (compressed air, heating,…) • Buildings (walls, illumination,…) • Information and transportation systems.

  6. Thinking revolution The 5S Visual Control Workforce optimization Standard operations Poka-Yoke Jidoka 1 20 11 12 9 TPM One-Piece flow Multi- functional workers 7 16 5 14 Leveling Production Kanban SMED 4 6 17 8 JUST IN TIME 15 18 19 13 10 3 2 Introduction • Some companies subcontract maintenance. • Is contemplated in both the Just-in-time and the 20 keys (key number 9) for lean. • Improves the availability and performance rates of the equipment.

  7. Types of maintenance • Corrective -> All industrial equipment is exposed to transitory (wear) or definitive breakdowns (catastrophic failure). • Affecting its functionality and performance. • Can represent high costs for enterprises. • Preventive -> The maintenance mission cannot only be repairing the breakdowns. • They should be able to get ahead of the breakdowns.

  8. Corrective maintenance • Also called breakdown maintenance. • Up to the 1950s it was virtually the only maintenance. • Machine stoppages hardly affected productive time. • Repairs were carried out in an effective way.

  9. Types of corrective maintenance • Urgent repairs. • Reestablishing the equipment into service. • Repair is carried out is temperally. • The remainder of the tasks will/can be scheduled for a future time.

  10. Types of corrective maintenance • Scheduled corrective. • Appears as a result of urgent repairs. • Determine an appropriate time to repair the machine completely. • After repairing the damaged component • As good as new. • At least as it was before.

  11. Repair problems • Repair tasks are performed quickly and under pressure, which can cause future problems. • Repair time can be very high because replacement part(s) may have to be ordered from a supplier.

  12. Repair problems • Accidents can take place because of poor maintenance safety measures. • Corrective maintenance policy implies higher labor costs. • This policy can be justified in some cases. • Equipment with a frequent replacement policy. • Like personal office computers. • When breakdown costs are small. • Light bulbs fail.

  13. Types of preventive maintenance • The preventive maintenance has two variants. • Systematic preventive maintenance. • Conditional preventive maintenance or predictive maintenance.

  14. Systematic preventive maintenance • 1960s -> the General Electric Corporation systematized a new type of maintenance called planned maintenance.

  15. Systematic preventive maintenance • Planned maintenance arrived to Japan. • The bases of this systematic preventive maintenance process were established. • Systematic substitution of some machine components.

  16. Systematic preventive maintenance • Applied to general wear or use components. • Know with precision the component’s performance characteristics.

  17. Systematic preventive maintenance • Replacement policy might call for a component to be replaced every week or in other ways such as, every 300 working hours or every 1000 parts produced.

  18. Conditional preventive maintenance • Also called predictive maintenance. • Systematic preventive maintenance can become very expensive.

  19. Conditional preventive maintenance • Conditional preventive maintenance is used to change components depending on their current state. • The useful life for costly components can be extended. • This type of maintenance best fits components where performance can be monitored.

  20. Conditional preventive maintenance • ISO 14000 (environmental norm) requires that industry avoid systematic preventive maintenance when working with environmentally harmful products.

  21. Conditional preventive maintenance • Predictive maintenance. • Look for correlations between multiple parameters and the degradation of a component. • Temperature (thermocouples), • Noises (phonometer). • Cracks (X-rays machine). • Pressure losses (manometer). • QS9000 recommends predictive maintenance.

  22. Maintenance program implementation • Almost all machines follow a similar lifecycle. • Hidden small defects. • Difficult to detect and to observe -> It does not interfere with functionality. • Increase of friction in an axle. • Apparent small defects. • Are more noticeable-> They are normally not repaired. • Small vibrations on a machine.

  23. Maintenance program implementation • Execution under expectations. • The defects affect the equipment productivity. • the standards of quality will be violated.

  24. Maintenance program implementation • Almost all machines follow a similar lifecycle. • Intermittent stops. • The machine intermittently produces defect parts. • Small repairs are performed. • Stops and breakdowns. • Breakdowns are frequent. • Production equipment may not be as new as we would like them to be. • “Stops and breakdown” stage.

  25. Maintenance program implementation • Production equipment typically becomes more sophisticated/complex. • More expensive every year. • It has greater economic impact. • Repairs should be done at a faster rate. • Working shifts can also represent an obstacle for maintenance interventions. • Limits possible maintenance tasks and scheduling.

  26. Maintenance program implementation • The objective of maintenance is to efficiently oversee equipment throughout the equipment life cycle. • Cover the entire lifecycle • Implementing an effective corrective maintenance. • Preventive maintenance tasks. • Implementing predictive maintenance strategies.

  27. Getting started • Become familiar with the resources that will require maintenance. • Each maintained resource should be coded (resource id#). • Code the types of breakdowns and maintenance tasks. • In a historical data study -> Group failure causes.

  28. Getting started • Maintenance should have the following two documents. • Facility Inventory. • Lists all equipments and their principle characteristics. • Code, record number, equipment type,… • Equipment History Files. • Data given by the equipment manufacturer. • Information about the location in the plant. • Types of spare parts needed. • …

  29. Corrective maintenance implementation • Organize, in an effective way, the corrective maintenance procedures and actions. • Breakdown occurs -> Fill out a breakdown work order. • If the worker can solve it -> fill a report. • If not -> the work order will be sent to the maintenance department. • Work request order will be issued. • Maintenance workers will either repair the machine immediately or will schedule the repair. • The repair can be provisional or definitive.

  30. Scheduled corrective maintenance • Variability in the corrective maintenance tasks duration can be problematic. • Corrective orders and flow diagrams for repetitive repairs must be developed. • Materials and spare parts that should be utilized. • Maintenance workers’ tasks do not end with the equipment repair. • They should gather all the breakdown information. • Describe the process that was performed.

  31. Scheduled corrective maintenance • Each machine should have its own file with breakdown records. • Analyze breakdown causes. • Anticipate future problems. • This file must be upgraded with each maintenance intervention.

  32. Scheduled corrective maintenance • Corrective maintenance tasks do not only consist on changing the broken or malfunctioning components. • Study the causes and the frequency of the breakdowns.

  33. Preventive maintenance implementation • Avoid a breakdown of any resource, while keeping maintenance cost as low as possible. • Two types of actions. • Inspections. • Observe and detect possible anomalies. • Frequent checkups that follow a specific inspection plan. • Revisions. • Scheduled equipment stops. • Systematic substitution of several machine components. • Carried out during the weekend.

  34. Preventive maintenance implementation • Preventive maintenance tasks’ scheduling is mandatory in the ISO norms.

  35. Preventive maintenance implementation • These tasks can be planned daily, weekly, monthly or even annually. • Scheduled at times when they do not affect the factory’s production plan. • Daily working problems force us to continuously reschedule these tasks.

  36. Preventive maintenance implementation • Equipment preventive maintenance tasks are also called PM orders. • Each PM order should be based on a study of the equipment breakdown causes. • FMEA tool described at the tools section.

  37. Autonomous maintenance • PM orders carried out by the production workers. • Known as user maintenance orders. • They should be simple and graphically represented. • Many inspection tasks should be carried out every day.

  38. Autonomous maintenance • Significant amount of notices that could be easily handled by the production worker. • It takes more time to fill out the request order than to fix the problem

  39. Autonomous maintenance • Autonomous maintenance includes these small tasks and three daily preventive measures. • Cleaning, lubricating and checking.

  40. Autonomous maintenance. Safety • Safety is one of the most important restrictions. • Autonomous tasks apply only for simple repair operations. • Repair or maintenance should never be performed if the knowledge required to fix the machine is high.

  41. Autonomous maintenance. Safety • It can be very challenging to convince production workers about the importance of maintenance tasks. • They do not consider their responsibility.

  42. Autonomous Supervision 7 Process Quality Assurance 6 Autonomous Maintenance Standards 5 Overall inspections 4 Cleaning and Lubricating Standards 3 Countermeasures to Sources of Contamination 2 1 Initial cleaning Autonomous maintenance • Autonomous maintenance implementation process has a specific methodology.

  43. TPM - Total Productive Maintenance • In the 1970s, Nakajima developed in Japan TPM. • New maintenance management philosophy. • English translation was not published until 1988. • JIPM – Japanese Institute of Plants Maintenance. • Grants the PM prize to the TPM top excellent companies. • 60% of the winning companies during the first 17 years are now part of the Toyota Group or suppliers of this Group.

  44. TPM - Total Productive Maintenance • Nakajima combined preventive maintenance theories with the total quality concept. • Nakajima developed the Overall Equipment Efficiency ratio.

  45. TPM keys • Maximize the Overall Equipment Efficiency. • Eliminating the six big losses. • Autonomous maintenance implementation. • In order to terminate the “I operate, you repair” mind set. • Preventive engineering. • Improving the equipments’ maintainability.

  46. TPM keys • Training workers for maintenance improvements. • Propose methods for increasing the equipment availability. • Initial equipment management. • The objective of the TPM -> Zero Breakdowns. • Utilize tools such as the P-M analysis -> Explained in tools section.

  47. RCM - Reliability Centered Maintenance • RCM was created in the United States in the 1960s, to optimize the reliability of aeronautical equipment. • RCM was not utilized in nuclear power stations until the 1980s. • Recently has been implemented in the industrial world.

  48. RCM - Reliability Centered Maintenance • Needs a complete maintenance and breakdown record for each item of equipment. • RCM objective is to determine the maintenance tasks that are more effective for the critical components. • FMEA, reliability analysis, statistical techniques. • It is necessary to have a preventive maintenance program implemented and running properly.

  49. FMEA for equipment • All defects have a root cause, and to eliminate future defects an action must be carried out. • Defect -> Gap between two elements • Cause -> Lack of lubrication or a loose fastener. • Action -> Grease or tighten the lose element.

  50. FMEA for equipment • To determine a good preventive maintenance plan, all the possible breakdowns, their causes and their corrective actions must be analyzed. • The main tool to carry out this type of analysis is the FMEA for equipment (Failure Mode and Effects Analysis). • Is a guide to analyze, in an organized manner, causes of possible equipment breakdowns. • A group of workers is gathered to study the problems and failures

More Related