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December 2000

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Subject:
From:
Hans Hinners <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
TechNet E-Mail Forum.
Date:
Tue, 5 Dec 2000 08:37:28 -0800
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Howdy Earl,

Sage Advice:

Establish real benchmarks and don't move to the next step until you are
ready.  I've seen too many projects maintain a schedule, at least on paper,
only to fall apart when a discrepant event occurs.  The organization must be
honest about the progress it has made and it's ability to achieve the next
step.

Do things right.

Fix the problem not the symptoms.

Hans

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hans M. Hinners
Process Engineer
Toppan Electronics, Inc.
770 Miramar Road
San Diego, CA 92126
(858) 695 - 2222 ext. 241
(858) 695 - 6823 fax
[log in to unmask]


-----Original Message-----
From: Earl Moon [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Tuesday, December 05, 2000 3:53 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [TN] Advice about pull manufacturing implementation


Hello folks,

I'm down here in Texas working in a Hybrid house with a high volume product
or two. That's a bit unusual, but the job shop mentality is alive and well.

Management recognizes the need to convert from a typical job shop "push"
type manufacturing system to a "pull" system. They hired me to do this but
I'm a bit rusty but full of all kinds of great ideas - some based on past
experience and some on what I've been reading about the latest and greatest
stuff.

We've still got world class mfg with JIT, cell manufacturing, etc. I'm
leaning toward a continuous flow system embodying most all concepts or being
a part of them. They all seem to offer pretty much the same thing when done
right - using tools such as kanban, kaizen, etc.

That brings me to the question, without getting too phylosophical,
concerning pitfalls when implementing this type manufacturing. We're making
widgets going from about 80k parts/month to about four times that in a short
period. We have most of the bottlenecks resolved and the boys and girls
received their Theory of Constraints lessons a few years back along with
their ISO and QS9000 registration so there's knowledge but no practical
experience doing heavy duty production.

Just wondering if any of you have any terse, simple, sage advice about what
must be done and what must be avoided.

Thanks,

Earl Moon

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