Page 263 - TPM A Route to World-Class Performance
P. 263

Case studies  237


                       - Wastesand
                       - gas emissions
                       - Kaizen/continuous improvement
                       - Attendance
                       - Customer returns
                       - Lost time accidents
                       - Injurious accidents
                       - Audit conformance
                       - Product conformance
                       - Mainpac reports
                       - Activityboards
                     Each team has an activity board covering subjects such as milestone activities,
                  for example schedule adherence oust in Time), key performance indicators,
                  training status, health and safety, today's quality actions and previous day's
                  conformance report by production, scrap and target.
                     0  Total Manufacturing Concept (TMC), A system whch pinpoints adions
                       for each machine, each month, under headings of Quality, Cost, Delivery
                       and People.
                     0  Quarterly housekeeping audits.
                     0  Shadow boards Each area now has shadow boards for storing tools in an
                       ordered and easily identifiable way.
                     0  TPM fm Design TPM for Design principles are applied when specifying
                       new machines and processes.

                     To keep abreast of  such a variety of  routines, the teams have to dedicate
                  substantial tune to TPM activities, as well as flexibility to ensure that a meeting
                  deferred is not a meeting abandoned. In spite of  production pressures, TPM
                  team members recognize that they have to 'take time to save time'.


                  3.0 Benefits

                  TPM has both a direct and an indirect effect on a production system. The
                  direct effects are easier to assess and are directly quantifiable (see Table 11.1).
                     The indirect  effects can be  ascertained  from more subjective measures,
                  such as morale and absenteeism levels, which show themselves as an increase
                  in the efficiency of  the overall production system. Estimating cost savings
                  involves looking at a variety of  factors, from labour and materials costs to
                  energy savings and increases in production capacity.
                     Indirect savings attributed to TPM include sharing of  best practices, both
                  across the shifts and with the site in general, and TF'M teams solving problems
                  that have a beneficial effect on unrelated areas, e.g. improving stock control
                  systems.
                     The combination of  indirect and direct effects at RHP Bearings Blackburn
                  generated major savings. Major site-wide benefits from TPM activity were
                  scored in the following areas:
   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268