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TPM for equipment designers


                   and suppliers





                   Behind the plant and equipment used in the production process there are
                   three functional groups, namely:
                       Operations
                       Commercial
                       Engineering
                     These  make  up three  essential  partners  for new  product/equipment
                   introduction. This chapter describes in outhe how these activities must be
                   co-ordinated and focused on the TPM objectives. The partnership requires a
                   sustained  drive  towards  improving  project  and  design  management
                  performance  through  the  elimination  of  hidden  losses  such  as  poor
                  maintainability, operability, and reliability early  in the equipment management
                  process.
                     Designers and engineers need to improve their skills by:

                       regular visits to the shopfloor and learning from what operators and
                       maintainers have to say;
                       studymg what has been achieved in equipment improvement as a result
                       of  self-direded and quality maintenance activities;
                       gaining hands-on  experience with  equipment,  including  operation,
                       cleaning, lubrication and inspection;
                       supporting P-M  analysis as part of  the key contad/team  activities;
                       conducting maintenance prevention analyses.

                     Figures 9.1 and  9.2 show  how  the  five goals of  TPM  can be  achieved
                  through design feedback, early warning systems and objective testing of new
                  ideas.
                     Figure 9.3 portrays the benefits of using TOM design techniques, TPM (D),
                  as the driver for Early Equipment Management (EEM). All partners are involved
                  in  achieving the  continuous  improvement  habit,  learning how  to  deliver
                  flawless operation in less time.
                     It also shows what the TPM (D) process can deliver over the life of  the
                  equipment. The gap between typical (or traditional) output/value  and true
                  potential by getting it right in the early stages is huge.
                     Figure 9.4  illustrates the concept that two-thirds of  the lifetime costs of
                  new equipment is determined (but not spent) in the early design specification
                  stages and can, therefore, be said to be designed in. T~IS serves to emphasize
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