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Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition. Chapter 1 . Quality Improvement in the Modern Business Environment. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition. 1-1. The Meaning of Quality and Quality Improvement. 1-1.1 Dimensions of Quality1-1.2 Quality Engineerin
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1. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Douglas C. Montgomery
Arizona State University
2. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Chapter 1 Quality Improvement in the Modern Business Environment
3. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1. The Meaning of Quality and Quality Improvement
1-1.1 Dimensions of Quality
1-1.2 Quality Engineering Technology
4. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.1 Dimensions of Quality
Performance
Reliability
Durability
Serviceability
Aesthetics
Features
Perceived Quality
Conformance to standards
5. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Performance Will the product perform its intended function?
Will this industrial scale measure up to 4000 pounds in 5 pound graduations?
6. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Reliability How often does the product fail?
How often do I have to take this Toyota Camry to the service department?
7. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Durability How long will the product last?
The product should perform satisfactorily over a long period of life
If I buy that 1999 Toyota 4Runner when the lease expires, will it give me good service for 10 more years?
8. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Serviceability How easy is it to repair the product?
If amazon.com sends the wrong book, how hard is it to get this error corrected?
9. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Aesthetics Is the product pleasing to the senses?
Do you like the box in which Timberland Shoes are packaged?
10. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Features What will the product do beyond the basics?
Does the new Ford Focus come with a CD changer, or do you have to pay extra for that?
11. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Perceived quality What is the reputation of the company selling this product?
Is Delta really ready when you are?
Why do people buy Gucci handbags?
12. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Conformance to standards Is the product made as designed?
Why do they have to beat on those Ford Taurus bodies when they are being assembled in Hapeville?
13. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.1 Dimensions of Quality Definitions of Quality
Quality means fitness for use
- quality of design
- quality of conformance
Quality is inversely proportional to variability.
14. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Quality of design Automobile differences
Materials used in construction
Specifications of the components
Reliability of drive train components
Reliability of accessories
15. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Quality of conformance How well does the product conform to the specifications required by the design?
Choice of manufacturing processes
Training of the workers
Supervision of the workers
Motivation of the workers
Quality-assurance procedures that were used
16. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Quality is inversely proportional to variability Toyota Lexus versus Ford Taurus
That transmission noise (or lack of it) is wasted energy caused by components that don’t fit precisely
Imprecise components lead to wear and tear
Ford Taurus/Mercury Sable transmission lasts for 64,000 miles
17. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.1 Dimensions of Quality – Transmission Example
18. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.1 Dimensions of Quality Quality Improvement
Quality improvement is the reduction of variability in processes and products.
Alternatively, quality improvement is also seen as “waste reduction.”
19. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology
Quality Characteristics
Physical - length, weight, voltage, viscosity
Sensory - taste, appearance, color
Time Orientation - reliability, durability, serviceability
20. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology
Quality engineering is the set of operational, managerial, and engineering activities that a company uses to ensure that the quality characteristics of a product are at the nominal or required levels.
21. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Inherent variability No two products are ever identical
Slight differences in materials
Slight differences in machine settings
Slight differences in operators
Slight differences in ambient temperature during production
Papermate Pens not much different
Fins on a turbine engine quite a lot
22. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology
Two types of data:
Attributes Data - discrete data, often in the form of counts
Variables Data - continuous measurements such as length, weight
Both types will be discussed in the course
23. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology Specifications
Quality characteristics being measured are often compared to standards or specifications.
Desired measure for the quality characteristic
Example: Shaft and bearing
Too loose the assembly will wobble causing wear
Too tight, and the assembly can not be made, no clearance
24. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology Specifications
Nominal or target value
Desired value for a quality characteristic
25. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology Specifications
Upper Specification Limit (USL)
Lower Specification Limit (LSL)
Largest and smallest allowable values
26. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology Specifications
Upper Specification Limit (USL)
Lower Specification Limit (LSL)
One-sided
The compression strength of a Coke bottle must be greater than a given psi value
Two-sided
The weight of potato chips in the bag can be between 7.8 and 8.3 ounces
27. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Design specifications Over the wall
From design to manufacturing
Cooperatively
Between design and manufacturing
28. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology When a component or product does not meet specifications, it is considered to be nonconforming.
A nonconforming product is considered defective if it has one or more nonconformities that may seriously affect the safe or effective use of the product.
29. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology A new car is purchased
A bubble in the paint on the door is noticed
Nonconformity – yes
Defective car - no
30. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-1.2 Quality Engineering Terminology Concurrent Engineering
Team approach to design. Specialists from manufacturing, quality engineering, management, etc. work together for product or process improvement.
31. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-2. A Brief History of Quality Control and Improvement (Refer to Table 1-1)
Frederick Taylor (1875) introduces the principles of scientific management; dividing work into tasks with standardized procedures
The Gilbreths developed standard times and motions (1920s)
32. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-2. A Brief History of Quality Control and Improvement (Refer to Table 1-1)
Walter Shewhart (1924) introduced statistical control chart concepts and QC begins
Dodge and Romig (1928), Bell Labs, develop acceptance sampling as an alternate to 100% inspection
During WW II the shells didn’t fit the howitzers leading to development of MIL-STDs
33. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-2. A Brief History of Quality Control and Improvement (Refer to Table 1-1)
The American Society for Quality Control formed in 1946 [now known as the American Society for Quality (ASQ)]
1950s and 1960s saw an increase in reliability engineering, experimental design, and statistical quality control
34. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-2. A Brief History of Quality Control and Improvement (Refer to Table 1-1)
Competition from foreign industries (Japan) increases during the 1970s and 1980s.
Statistical methods for quality improvement use increases in the United States during the 1980s
Total Quality Management (TQM) emerges during 1970s and into the 1980s as an important management tool to implement statistical methods.
35. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-2. A Brief History of Quality Control and Improvement
Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award is established in 1988.
ISO 9000 certification activities increase in U.S. industry in the 1990s.
Motorola’s Six-Sigma initiative begins in the 1990s.
36. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-3. Statistical Methods for Quality Control and Improvement
Three major areas:
Statistical process control (SPC)
Design of experiments (DOE)
Acceptance sampling
37. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-3. Statistical Methods for Quality Control and Improvement
Statistical Process
Control (SPC)
Control charts are used for process monitoring and variability reduction.
SPC is an on-line quality control tool.
38. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-3. Statistical Methods for Quality Control and Improvement
Design of Experiments
Experimental design is an approach to systematically varying the controllable input factors in the process then determining the effect these factors have on the output responses.
Experimental designs are off-line quality tools.
Crucial for variability reduction.
39. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-3. Statistical Methods for Quality Control and Improvement Acceptance Sampling
Acceptance sampling is the inspection and classification of a sample of the product selected at random from a larger batch or lot and the ultimate decision about disposition of the lot.
Two types:
1. Outgoing inspection - follows production
2. Incoming inspection - before use in production
40. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Quality cannot be inspected into the product When the organization realizes this, process improvement efforts begin
41. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition The objective Systematic reduction of variability
First, by using acceptance sampling
Then, by using SPC
Finally, by using DOE
We don’t stop when requirements are met
Further reductions in variability lead to better performance
Avoid the Taurus transmission
42. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-4. Other Aspects of Quality Control and Improvement Total Quality Management (TQM)
TQM is a managerial framework to accomplish quality improvement.
Other names and related approaches:
Company-Wide Quality Control (CWQC)
Total Quality Assurance (TQA)
Six-Sigma
43. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-4. Other Aspects of Quality Control and Improvement 1-4.1 Quality Philosophy and Management
Strategies
1-4.2 The Link Between Quality and
Productivity
1-4.3 Quality Costs
1-4.4 Legal Aspects of Quality
1-4.5 Implementing Quality Improvement
44. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-4.1 Quality Philosophy and Management Strategies Three Important Leaders
W. Edwards Deming
- Emphasis on statistical methods in quality improvement
Joseph Juran
- Emphasis on managerial role in quality implementation
Armand V. Feigenbaum
- Emphasis on organizational structure
45. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition W. Edwards Deming After WW II, he consulted with Japanese industries
Demanded management commitment to use statistical methods
Deming Prize in Japan
For quality improvement
Deming was a harsh critic of US management practices
46. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1. Create a constancy of purpose Focus on the improvement of products and services
Constantly improve product design and performance
Invest in R&D
Innovate
47. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 2. Adopt a new philosophy Eliminate defective products
It costs as much to produce a defective unit as a good one
Dealing with scrap and rework is very expensive
48. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 3. Don’t rely on inspection Inspection only sorts out defectives
Already have paid to produce them
Inspection is too late in the process
It’s also ineffective
Prevent defectives through process improvement
49. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 4. Don’t award business on price alone Consider supplier quality as well
Give preference to those suppliers that demonstrate process control and process capability
50. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 5. Focus on continuous improvement Involve the workforce
Use statistical techniques
51. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 6. Invest in training Everyone should be trained in the technical aspects of their job, QC, and process improvement
Workers should be encouraged to put this training to use
52. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 7. Practice modern supervision methods Help the employees improve the system in which they work
53. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 8. Drive out fear Create an environment where the workers will ask questions, report problems, or point out conditions that are barriers to quality
54. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 9. Break down the barriers Break down the barriers between the functional areas of the business
Only through teamwork can quality and process improvement take place
55. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 10. Eliminate targets and slogans Useless without a plan for the achievement of the target or goal
Instead, improve the system and provide information on that
56. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 11. Eliminate quotas Numerical quotas and work standards often conflict with quality control
57. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 12. Encourage employees to do their job Remove the barriers
Listen to the workers
The person doing the job knows more about it than anyone else
58. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 13. Have ongoing education and training Teach them simple yet powerful statistical techniques
Use the basic SPC tools, particularly the control chart
59. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 14. Involve top management Management should be advocates for these points
60. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Dr. Joseph Juran A founder of SQC
Co-author of QC Handbook (1957)
His philosophy is based on management of the quality function
Says that 80% of the opportunities for quality improvement can be addressed by management and only 20% by the workers
61. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Dr. Armand Feigenbaum Total Quality Control (1951)
Concern is with organizational structure to improve quality
Says that QC should be concentrated in a specialized department
Conflicts with Deming on this point
62. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-4.1 Quality Philosophy and Management Strategies Total Quality Management (TQM)
Quality Standards and Registration
ISO 9000
Six Sigma
Just-In-Time, Lean Manufacturing, Poka-Yoke, etc.
63. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition TQM Began in the early 80s based on the philosophies of Deming and Juran
Evolved into wide spectrum of ideas
Participation in quality groups
Work culture
Customer focus
Supplier quality improvement
Cross-functional teams concerned with quality
64. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition TQM A success?
Moderately
Why not?
Not enough concern for reduction of variability
Ineffective training conducted by HR people
No knowledge of what is important
Success measured by % of workforce trained
Management not committed
65. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition TQM More reasons for lack of success
Zero defects, value engineering, quality is free
Programs with no emphasis on reducing variability
66. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition ISO 9000 Quality system oriented
Say what you do, do what you say
Much effort devoted to paperwork and bookkeeping
Not much to reducing variability and improving processes
67. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition ISO 9000 paragraphs 1. Management responsibility for quality
2. Design control
3. Document and data control
4. Purchasing and contract management
5. Product identification and traceability
6. Inspection and testing, including control of measurement and inspection equipment
68. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition ISO 9000 paragraphs 7. Process control
8. Handling of nonconforming product
9. Handling, storage, packaging and delivery of product
10. Control of quality records
11. Internal audits
12. Training
13. Statistical methodology
69. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition ISO 9000 US$40 billion annual business worldwide
Registrars, auditors, consultants
Plus, 1000s of hours of internal costs
Effective?
Does it reduce variability?
70. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Six Sigma Developed by Motorola in the late 80s
Consider that + 3s provides 0.00135 in each tail, or 0.00270 in the two tales
So, in 1 million parts, 2700 would be defective
71. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Six Sigma Consider an assembly of 100 parts that must all function for the assembly to function
.9973 x .9973 x …..9973 = (.9973)100 = .7631
Thus, about 23.7% of the products under 3s will fail
Not usually an acceptable situation
72. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Six Sigma But, + 6s results in 0.999999998 inside specs
(0.999999998)100 = .9999998
Or, 2 parts/billion defective
i.e., 0.2 ppm
Much better than + 3s
73. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Six Sigma Has moved beyond Motorola
Has come to encompass much more
Has become a method for improving corporate business performance
Companies involved in Six Sigma use teams that work on projects involving quality and costs
74. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Six Sigma More successful than TQM
More managerial commitment
Involves costs
But, it’s still another slogan and program
Better to train everyone in quality tools and make efforts to reduce variability
75. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition JIT, Lean Manufacturing, etc. Programs that devote too little attention to variance reduction
For example, JIT
The variability in demand results in a need for inventory
Reduce the variability and reduce the inventory
76. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-4.2 The Link Between Quality and Productivity Effective quality improvement can be instrumental in increasing productivity and reducing cost.
The cost of achieving quality improvements and increased productivity is often negligible.
77. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition An example Data
100 parts/day are manufactured
75% are conforming
60% of the nonconforming can be reworked for a cost of $4
Remainder are scrapped
Direct manufacturing cost is $20/part
78. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition An example Cost/conforming part
[$20 (100) + $4 (15)]/90 = $22.89
Note that the yield is 90 conforming/day
79. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition An example New process us introduced
Fallout is 5%
60% can be reworked
Cost/conforming part
[$20 (100) + $4 (3)]/98 = $20.53
Note that the yield is 98 conforming/day
Up from 90/day
And, costs are reduced by 10.3%
80. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-4.3 Quality Costs Quality Costs are those categories of costs that are associated with producing, identifying, avoiding, or repairing products that do not meet requirements. These costs are:
Prevention Costs
Appraisal Costs
Internal Failure Costs
External Failure Costs
81. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Quality costs Prevention costs
Quality planning and engineering
New products review
Product/process design
Burn-in
Training
Quality data acquisition and analysis
82. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Appraisal costs Inspection and test of incoming material
Product inspection and test
Materials and services consumed
Maintaining accuracy of test equipment
83. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Internal failure costs Scrap
Rework
Retest
Failure analysis
Downtime
Yield losses
Downgrading (off-specing)
84. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition External failure costs Complaint adjustment
Returned product/material
Warranty charges
Liability costs
Indirect costs
85. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Pareto analysis Cost reduction through identifying improvement opportunities
Identifying quality costs by category, or by product, or by type of defect or nonconformity
86. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Monthly quality costs for PCB assembly
87. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Pareto analysis Insufficient solder
42% of defects and 52% of scrap and rework costs
Work on that defect first
Most of the cost reductions will come from attacking the few problems that are responsible for the majority of the quality costs
88. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Appraisal or prevention Many firms spend far too much of their quality management budget on appraisal and not enough on prevention
Money spent on prevention has a much better payoff than money spent on appraisal
89. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-4.4 Legal Aspects of Quality The re-emergence of quality assurance as an important business strategy is in part a result of
Consumerism
Product Liability
90. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Consumerism Virtually every product line of today is superior to that of yesterday
But, many consumers see it otherwise
Consumer tolerance for minor defects & aesthetic problems has decreased considerably
Blemishes, surface-finish defects, noises, appearance problems
91. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Consumerism Many manufacturers introduce new designs before they are fully evaluated and tested
To remain competitive
Unproved designs
92. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition Product liability Manufacturers and sellers are likely to incur a liability when they have been unreasonably careless or negligent in what they have designed, or produced, or how they have produced it
93. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition More stringent: Strict liability 1. There is a strong responsibility for both manufacturer and merchandiser requiring immediate responsiveness to unsatisfactory quality through product service, repair, or replacement of defective product
Extends into the period of use by the consumer
By producing the product, manufacturer and seller must accept responsibility for use
94. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition More stringent: Strict liability 2. All advertising statements must be supportable by valid company quality or certification data
95. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition 1-4.5 Implementing Quality Improvement Strategic management of quality
Almost all successful efforts have been management-driven.
Too much emphasis on registration and certification programs (ISO, QS)
Insufficient focus on quality planning and design, quality improvement, overemphasis on quality assurance
Poor use of available resources
96. Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 4th Edition End