Page 12 - TPM A Route to World-Class Performance
P. 12

Preface





                    Customers expect manufacturers to provide excellent quality, reliable delivery
                    and competitive pricing. This demands that the manufacturer’s machines
                    and processes are highly reliable. But what does the term ’highly reliable’
                    really mean?
                       Certainly, with manufacturing, process and service industries becoming
                    progressively dependent on the reliability of  fewer but more sophisticated
                    machines and processes, it means that poor equipment operating performance
                    is no longer affordable or acceptable. The overall effectiveness of our machines,
                    equipment and processes is paramount to provide consistency of  product
                    quality and supply at a realistic price.
                      Coping with modern manufacturing technology that  is intrinsic in the
                    materials, mechanisms and processes which we invent, design and use is one
                    issue. Delivering the manufacturing company’s vision and values as a lean,
                    just-in-time producer to its customers, shareholders and employees is another.
                       Some world-class Japanese companies recognized over twenty-five years
                    ago that the effective application of  modern technology can only be achieved
                    through people - starting with the operators and maintainers of that technology
                    - and not through systems alone. Hence the emergence of  total, productive
                    maintenance as the enabling tool to maximize the effectiveness of our equipment
                    by setting and maintaining the optimum relationship between people and
                    their machines.
                      The problem with the words ’Total Productive Maintenance’ - and hence
                    the philosophy or technique of  TPM - is that, to Western ears, they sound as
                    though TPM is a maintenance function  or a maintenance department initiative.
                    But it is not! On the contrary, TPM is driven by manufacturing which picks
                    up production and maintenance as equal partners: it is no longer appropriate
                    to say ’I operate, you  fix’ and  ’I  add value, you cost money’. What TPM
                    promotes is: ’We are both responsible for this machine, process or equipment
                    and, between us, we will determine the  best way to operate, maintain and
                    support it’. Perhaps a better way of  describing TPM, therefore, is to think of
                    it as Total Productive Manufacturing, as it picks up operations and maintenance
                    as equal partners under the umbrella of  manufacturing.
                      The problem of  definition has arisen because the word ’maintenance’ has
                    a much more comprehensive meaning in Japan than in the Western world. If
                    you ask someone from a typical Western manufacturing company to define
                    the word ’maintenance’, at best he might say, ‘Carry out planned servicing at
                    fixed intervals’; at worst he might say, ’Fix it when it breaks down’. If you ask
                    a Japanese person from a world-class manufacturing company, he will probably
                    say,  ’Maintenance means  maintaining  and  improving  the  integrity  of  our
                    production and quality systems through the machines, processes, equipment
                    and people who add value to our products and services, that is, the operators
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