Page 109 - TPM A Route to World-Class Performance
P. 109

90  TPM-A  Route to World-Class Performance


                   The important  components  and  elements  of  the  process,  machine  or
                 equipment are identified: some typical examples are electrics, hydraulics,
                 pneumatics, cooling systems and control systems. Each of  these elements is
                 assessed in terms of  criteria such as the following:

                      Safety If  this component was in poor condition or failed, what would be
                      the impact on safety due to increased risk of  injury?
                      Availability  If  this component was in poor  condition or  failed, what
                      would be the impact on the availability of  the equipment, including set-
                      up and the need for readjustment of  equipment settings?
                      Performance What impact does this component have on the cycle time or
                      processing capacity of  the equipment when it is available to run?
                      Quality If  this component were in poor condition or failed, what impact
                      would  it have  on product  quality at start-up and/or  during normal
                      production?
                      Reliability What impact does the frequency with which this component
                      fails have on the overall criticality of  the equipment?
                      Maintainability What impact does this component have on the ease of
                      maintaining or repairing the equipment?
                      Environment  If  this component was in poor condition or failed, what
                      would be the impact on the environment due to emissions, noise, fluid
                      spills, dust, dirt, etc.?
                      Cost If  this component was in poor condition or failed, what would be
                      the impact on total cost, including repair and lost production?
                      Total  The sum of  the rankings for each component.

                 The significance of  each of the criteria is assessed and allocated a score according
                 to impact on the process: 1 = no impact, 2  = some impact, 3  = significant
                 impact.
                   A typical matrix form for recording process elements and criteria scores is
                 shown in Figure 5.14. The right-hand  (totals) column enables priority to be
                 applied to those elements most affected. This is further illustrated in Figures
                 5.15 and 5.16.
                   The main outputs from the critical assessment process are that it:
                      starts the teamwork building between operators and maintainers;
                      results in a fuller understanding of  their equipment;
                      provides a checklist for the condition appraisal;
                    0  provides a focus for the future asset care;
                      highlights weaknesses regarding operability, reliability, maintainability.
                 The critical assessment matrix provides the basis for understanding not just
                 the most critical components but also those which contribute to special loss
                 areas. For example, high scores on S, M and R indicate components which
                 have a high impact on safety, are unreliable and difficult to maintain. A score
                 of  6 or above on these three is an accident waiting to happen.
                    Other useful subsets include:
   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114