OVERALL EQUIPMENT  EFFICIENCY
Old definition:
OEE stands for Overall Equipment Efficiency and is the primary measure of
production effectiveness. It can be used for value stream or individual work
station performance evaluation. Good value stream OEE is one of the key
precursors to the implementation of Lean and is the product of three important
operational parameters. These are: Equipment availability, quality yield,
cycle-time performance. To calculate OEE, you will need five parameters. First
is the planned production time for the line. Second is the unplanned line
downtime. Third is the line cycle time, or cycle time, of the bottleneck.
Fourth is the total production including scrap, and fifth is the total amount
of salable product.
(How to Implement Lean
Manufacturing, Lonnie Wilson; Page:61)
New definition:
Manufacturing companies are in business to make money, and they make
money by adding value to materials to make products the customers want. Most
companies use machines to add value to the products. To add value effectively,
it is important to run the machines effectively, with as little waste as
possible. Overall equipment effectiveness is a measurement used in TPM to
indicate how effectively machines are running. What do we mean by overall
equipment effectiveness? Many people are familiar with the idea of
"efficiency," which usually reflects the quantity of parts a machine
or a person can produce in a certain time. OEE is different from efficiency in
several ways.
A machines’s overall effectiveness includes more than the quantity of
parts it can produce in a shift. When we measure overall equipment
effectiveness, we account for efficiency as one factor:
·                    
Performance: a comparison of the actual output
whit that the machine should be producing in the same time
In addition to performance, however, OEE includes two other factors:
·                    
Availability: a comparison of the potential
operating time and the time in which the machine is actually making products.
·                    
Quality: a comparison of the number of products
made and the number of products that meet the customer’s specifications.
When you multiply performance availability, and quality, you get the
overall equipment effectiveness, which is expressed as a percentage. OEE gives
a complete picture of the machine’s ‘’health’’_ not just how fast it can make
parts, but how much the potential output was limited due to lost availability
of poor quality.
Unlike some uses of the efficiency measure, OEE monitors the machine or
process that adds the value, not the operator’s productivity. When we measure
OEE, we look at how well the equipment or process is working.
Measuring OEE is not an approach for criticizing people. It is strictly
about improving the equipment or process. Used as an impartial daily snapshot
of equipment conditions, OEE promotes openness in information sharing and a
no-blame approach in handling equipment-related issues.
OEE is a measure of overall equipment efficiency, and a higher value
indicates an overall better condition than a lower value. Study of each of the
factors involved in the calculation of the OFF provides a clue about how to
improve the equipment condition and increase its OEE. Figure 6-1 illustrates
the formula for OEE calculation .
 ( Matthew P. Stephens , Productivity and
Reliability-Based Maintenance Management, pg.161)
(OEE for operators: overall
equipment effectiveness, created by Productivity development team,pg.4,5)
ELECTROPOLISHING
Old definition:
Electropolishing is a electrochemical process by which surface material
is removed by anodic dissolution. Sometimes referred to as reverse plating,
electropolishing actually removes surface material beginning with high points
within the microscopic surface texture. By removing these points, the
electropolishing process will improve the surface finish, leaving a smoother
and more reflective surface. Electropolishing delivers a smoother, more
reflective surface that reduces product adhesion and imporves surface
cleanability. This porcess improves the near surface chemistry of the material,
and promotes to the formation of an improved corrosion-resistant surface layer.
(O. G. Palana, Engineering
Chemistry, p.162)
New definition:
Ectropolishing is defined as a process of anodic dissolution of metals or
alloys in an appropriate solution resulting in production of improved
morphology and geometry of the surface and a shiny, bright and smooth
appearance. Technical advantages of the electropolishing include a reduction in
coefficient of friction. An increase in the magnetic susceptibility of some
magnetic materials, an increase in corrosion resistance and excellent
reflectance in addition electropolishing is widely used in the metallography
for the microscopic investigation of crystallographic structure of metals and
alloys. Elettropolishing as an anode process, is similar to electromachining however
there are significant differences between them. ha. instance, eleetropolishing
is usually carried out from unstirred, concentrated acidic solutions as
electrolytes, at lower current densities, and with the electrode separations of
at least  1cm. The quality or electropolished
surfaces depends on electrochemical conditions including ;fluidic polarization.
electrolyte composition and microgeometry. It is determined by the appearance.
measurements of profiles with optical profilometers and also using microscopic
techniques. In terms of the surface roughness, the two types of
electropolishing are distinguished. The first. commonly called anodic levelling
or smoothing, refers to the elimination of the surface roughness with a height of
more than 1 micrometer . The second type is called anodic brightening and is
referred to the elimination of surface roughness less than 1 micrometer.
However this distinguishing between the smoothing and brightening is a very
approximate simplification, since there is no simple relationship between
measurements ao profile and brightness.
(Konstantin Ivanovich Popov,Stojan
S. Djokić,Branimir N. Grgur, Fundamental aspects of electrometallurgy , pg.226)
ELASTOMER  FRICTION
Old definition is not found
New definition:
Friction and abrasion are two properties of major importance when
consider elastomeric components for dynamic applications. Dynamic seals, for
example, can undergo abrasion when sliding over dry surface where friction is
correspondingly high.
The friction coefficient of an elastomer depends on a number of factors,
such as its geometric shape and composition, temperature, pressure, rubbing seed
and surface finish of both the elastomeric part and the material with which it
is in contact.
High friction can be harmful because it generates heat, which can cause
degredation of the elastomer. The friction can be markedly decreased, by using
a suitable lubricant or by chemical treatment of the elastomer surface (section
2.11). Rubber compounds with ‘’self- contained’’ lubricants may also be used
where continuous presence of a lubricant is suspect and where minimal friction
is essential.
The abrasive wear, fatigue wear and frictional wear of rubber are all
generated on the rigid matrix surface in relative motion, which are dependent
on the roughness of the rigid matrix surface to a great extent. However, the
abrasive and fatigue wear frequently occurs on the smooth surfaces with high
frictional coefficient. So far as the severity of wear, the abrasive wear and
frictional wear are most serious, but fatigue wear is less. Friction mechanism
for the tree types of wear as shown in the figure 
3.2 is an
important characteristic of rubber wear.
Elastomers are usually formulated to have high friction coefficients
against a wide variety of counterfaces but the friction coefficient ran be very
low in some cases. Friction coefficients for some common elastomers against
hardened stainless steel are quite high. On the other hand, in water, the
coefficient of polyurethane against most other solids is less than 0.2. The
slippery nature of this elastomer became apparent when these materials came
into vogue In the 70's for floor finishes. They produced a very abrasion
resistant surface, but when wet they were a safety hazard. Their use as tires
and floor toppings has almost ceased but they are now used for seals and wear
parts in pumps where their slipperiness and abrasion resistance have a synergistic
effect.
·                    
The coefficient of friction of many elastomers
against other solids is often I or more, but the use environment may
significantly alter the friction characteristics. 
The high friction of elastomers is thought by some to arise from the
conformability of these materials to the counterface — there are more
junctions. There is not agreement on the mechanism of high friction of
elastomers but a plausible explanation could be obtained from the adhesion
model where the shear strength of elastomer Cs) is
(Khairi Nagdi ,Rubber as an
engineering material: guideline for users, pg. 29)
(Si-Wei Zhang, Tribology of
elastomers, pg. 38)
(K. C. Ludema,Raymond George
Bayer,ASTM Committee G-2 on Erosion and Wear, Tribological modeling for mechanical designers, pg.113)
QUALITY-ASSURANCE INSPECTION
Old definition:
The technique of quality-assurance inspection is the measuring of the
various quality characteristics generated in a production process or inherent
in the material.This type of inspection can be a check made on each piece produced
or a check made on a statistical sample of the lot.The inspection may be a
mechanical or electronic measurement or visual inspection the result of which
are compared with standards.
The inspection can be performed be the operator or worker making the part
or component by a second person who is responsible for measuring only or
performed entirely by computer-controlled measurement.
The inspection assures that the products being produced meet the
standards of quality and quality levels which have been previously established.
(Feigenbaum A.V.,Total Quality
Control Third Edition,p. 281)
New definition:
Quality assurance is the application of planned systematic quality
activities to ensure that the project will employ all processes needed to meet
requirements identified during quality planning.
•             Quality assurance
addresses the program; it is the combined set of activities that the project
team will perform to meet project objectives. Quality control addresses the
outcomes; it is about monitoring performance and doing something about the
results.
•              Defining quality
assurance activities is the fourth step in a seven-step quality journey that
provides a general framework for quality management. 
•             Quality assurance
activities are based on specifications and operational definitions. They
include identified resources and responsible entities. 
•             Metrics are the means
of measurement that link requirements, specifications, assurance activities,
and the metrics themselves. 
•             The quality assurance
plan lists all assurance activities in one place to assist in managing project
quality. 
•             Preparing a quality
assurance plan is the fifth step in the quality journey. 
Quality audits are structured reviews of the quality system. They may he
scheduled or random and conducted by internal or external elements.
Inspection plays a significant role in quality management, but it is a
role that is different from that in the traditional approach to quality.
Products must be inspected at the end of a process to ensure that they conform
to specification. Products must be checked before they are delivered to the
paying customer. In the traditional approach to quality, as explained earlier,
this end-of-process inspection was the principal focus. Results of the
inspection allowed delivery of the product or required rework or discard of the
defective items. In the contemporary view of quality, inspection plays a very
broad role across and throughout the process. Small, frequent inspections
ensure that the process is performing as planned, with the result being fewer
nonconforming products at the end of the process. In-process inspection may
reveal deficiencies that can be corrected before they cause costly scrap and
rework. Inspections may include several kinds of activities, such as: 
• Measuring physical characteristics of products 
• Examining products Icy completeness or correct assembly
 • Testing products for performance
(Kenneth
Rose, Project quality management: why, what and how,
pg.65-68)
FIRST-PASS YIELD
Old definition:
This is the number of units that make it through your final test station
without incident-usually expressed as a percent. In other words, of 100 units
submitted for final test, 99 units pass and one unit fails. This is a
first-pass yield of 99 percent. Any unit that gets to the end of the line and
requires rework of any kind is a failure. Each failure should be recorded and
the failure mode defined for further analysis, such as a Pareto analysis of all
failures. This will facilitate identification of the most critical areas that
are causing the failures and the ones needing attention first. Obviously,
first-pass yields should be measured after final product burn in, if there is
one, so that failures after burn in will be included in the analysis and resolution
process.
(Buckley R.L., Winning in high
competitive manufacturing environment, p.179)
New definition:
First pass yield is the percent of finished product or service units that
meet all quality-related specifications at a critical test point in the process.
This metric assesses the yield that results from the first time through the
process, before any rework, and it is calculated as the percent of output that
meets target-grade specifications after the first time through the process.
First-pass yield is the proportion of units that, on average, go through
a process the first time without defects. The first-pass yield is calculated as
follows: 
The first-pass yield indicates the ability of the process to produce
conforming output that satisfied customer requirements, while at the same time
providing insight into the level of rework inherent in the process. 
 (Advanced performance improvement in health
care: principles and methods ,Donald E. Lighter,Pg.278,298)
 
SUPERVISORY CONTROL AND DATA ACQUISITION sizden önce yazıldı malesef...
ReplyDeleteMüge spheroidizing 'i yazmıştım ben
ReplyDeletePrealloyed powders'ı da yazmıştım biraz daha dikkat edersen daha iyi olur.
DeleteElektropolishing hem sende hem de serdar yüksel'de cevaplanmış gözüküyor.(http://itu2011cim.blogspot.com/2012/03/serdar-yuksel-030070129-3rd-week.html)3. hafta için. geç farkettiğim için özür dilerim ama aranızda anlaşıp cevaplanmayan bir kelimemi cevaplarsanız sorun olmaz diye düşünüyorum. Bu konuda beni haberdar ederseniz sevinirim.
ReplyDeletegeçen hafta için cevaplanmayan kelimelerim:
Surface protection
Powder spraying (coating) (bunun powder coating olanı başka birinde var spesifik olarak spraying kısmı cevaplanmalı)
Merhaba;
ReplyDeleteBen bu kelimeyi hazırlarken kimsede oladığına eminim. Zaten bu durumdan ötürü canım baya sıkıldı. Bir arkadaş kelimeyi benden sonra cevaplamasına rağmen hocaya benden önce mail attığından ben iki kelimemi değiştirmek zorunda kaldım. şimdi tekrar kelime değiştirmek gerçekten bana büyük haksızlık olur diye düşünüyorum.