Total Productive Maintenance
Total Productive Maintenance
Total Productive Maintenance
MAINTENANCE - TPM
Student:
Module:
Quality Management
Year:
2014-2015
Lecturer:
Mary Doyle-kent
ABSTRACT
TPM or Total Productive Maintenance is a methodology that ensures the improvement of
productivity by eliminating losses due to equipment breakdowns, drop in speed of
production, losses due to low quality of manufactured products. It was born in the USA and
developed in Japan. Consolidates the total junction of man, machine, and company, in this
way, makes everyone involved in manufacturing processes have their importance. Based on
eight pillars, which support it, wishes to bring improvements in both physical (machines) and
psychological (employees) areas. The TPM plays an important role in industry, being widely
used for the purpose of obtaining a reduction in costs and increasing productivity, as well as
professional growth and motivation of the involved, so that they get more engaged in the
search for good results. In order to evaluate TPM in practice, was conducted a case study in
the company MRC Bearings, supplier of aerospace acknowledge.
TABLE OF FIGURE
CONTENTS
1.
2.
INTRODUCTION.........................................................................................................................6
1.1
Corrective Maintenance.........................................................................................................6
1.2
Preventive Maintenance.........................................................................................................7
1.3
Predictive Maintenance..........................................................................................................7
1.4
ANALYSIS....................................................................................................................................9
2.1
Advantages............................................................................................................................9
2.1.1
2.1.2
Increase productivity..........................................................................................................9
2.1.3
Lower inventory.................................................................................................................9
2.1.4
2.2
Disadvantages......................................................................................................................10
3.
EXAMPLE..................................................................................................................................10
4.
DISCUSSION..............................................................................................................................12
4.1
4.1.1
Focused Improvement......................................................................................................12
4.1.2
Autonomous Maintenance...............................................................................................13
4.1.3
Planned Maintenance.......................................................................................................13
4.1.4
4.1.5
Early Management...........................................................................................................14
4.1.6
Quality Maintenance........................................................................................................14
4.1.7
Office TPM......................................................................................................................14
4.1.8
4.2
5.
TPM Pillars..........................................................................................................................12
CONCLUSION...........................................................................................................................17
6.
REFERENCES............................................................................................................................17
7.
APPRENDICES..........................................................................................................................17
1.
INTRODUCTION
Souza (2006) defines the corrective maintenance as a technical activity responsible for
correcting a flaw identified in any part of the equipment. Incumbent upon it to generate the
information needed for analysis of performance, repeatability and other parameters of the
fault on the equipment. For corrective maintenance, it is necessary to have appropriate
workshops in order to complete the requested services, as well as appropriate tools and
appropriate instruments for development activity.
The services required under the corrective maintenance tend to become repetitive over
time, and with that, staff acquires greater speed and knowledge to solve problems, thus
forming the basis of preventive / predictive maintenance, and reducing costs in accordance
with the criticality of the process. Souza (2006) reports that most of corrective maintenance
applies to rotating equipment, the components wear out quickly. It is also held in damaged
equipment with operational failures and rotating equipment small. The occurrence of failures
necessarily lead to a detailed analysis to find the root cause of failures, and so identify them
and eliminate them so that they are recorded in the history of the equipment.
1.2 Preventive Maintenance
This activity is directly related to the gain by reducing the number of stops, thus
reducing production losses, thereby becoming a differentiator in today's competitive market.
2. ANALYSIS
2.1 Advantages
2.1.1
2.1.2
Increase productivity
Once that the equipment are not breaking, the machines and operators are always
working.
2.1.3
Lower inventory
There is no need to have a big inventory, with more accurate estimates of component
replacement requirements.
2.1.4
If there is a reduced variation in the process, the equipment have better accuracy and
repeatability.
2.2 Disadvantages
Challenging to implement
Total Productive Maintenance is a difficult method to implement because two
motives:
9
3. EXAMPLE
According Folts at the beginning, many people were skeptical and not interested in
getting involved with TPM. They had to rely on the Marshall Institute to organize their efforts
to TPM. Folts began working with the cleaning, inspection, lubrication, and the remedial
work on a few machines. As time passed and the results appeared, who were hesitant at first
suddenly wondered when your machine would be programmed to a TPM event.
10
MRC formed the Equipment Improvement Team (EIT) to work on the root cause of
the problems related to the equipment instead of just fixing the symptoms. Thus, it was
possible to solve chronic problems of equipment and increase its efficiency. After initial
success, followed eight events of TPM, MRC has expanded its efforts to TPM for his second
unit. They created a Steering Committee TPM, which had an important active member Bengt
Nilsson - Chairman of the MRC Bearings. Nilsson considers the TPM program as one of the
cornerstones for excellence manufacturing.
MRC has begun to create full-time TPM teams, which these TPM Coordinators
organize events in their areas, also lead EITs, and make sure the process keeps working. The
areas that MRC focused on were:
Preventative maintenance
1. Putting predictive maintenance process in place (i.e., vibration analysis
equipment)
2. Cleaning the machines, resulting in inspection
3. Creating standards on the equipment for cleaning, lubrication, and daily
checks
4. Collecting data on downtime
5. Creating Equipment Improvement Teams
6. Creating TPM Area Coordinators
From this experience, Russell suggests that organizations began TPM programs start
small and keep it simple. The key lesson got it was that good training and support of
management are critical to the success of TPM.
4. DISCUSSION
11
TPM
emerged.
The
fact
to
change
corrective
maintenance
to
predictive/preventive maintenance only bring profits for the company, because there are a
reduction in the maintenance costs and an increase of productivity. The basic practices of
TPM are often called the pillars or elements of TPM. The entire edifice of TPM is built and
stands, on eight pillars.
Focused Improvement
4.1.2
Autonomous Maintenance
4.1.3
Planned Maintenance
4.1.4
According to Souza (2006) the pillar of education and training is responsible for
providing resource to the production departments, maintenance, and management skills and
acquire knowledge about the equipment and mainly about the philosophy of TPM. Thus, they
will believe in the work to be done, which will result in increased productivity, reduced losses
and improved quality. Training is an investment that should not save, because the return is
guaranteed. Activities related to this pillar are: Perform audits, reduce the doubts regarding
TPM, among others.
13
4.1.5
Early Management
For Souza (2006), the major objective of this pillar is the development of the technical
specification of machinery and equipment, analyzing requirements and specifications adopted
by the TPM, mediating the claims of the other pillars of the program. The pillar acts together
with the pillar of Autonomous Maintenance. The fifth pillar is directly linked to the
acquisition of new equipment, modernization of processes and systems, based on experience
and applying such projects, thinking about the integration between man and machine taking
into account environmental conditions and production.
4.1.6
Quality Maintenance
The pillar aims to act in the elimination of losses related to the quality of equipment,
assisting in troubleshooting, establishing conditions on equipment that does not produce
defects in the final product. According to Souza (2006), the support areas to ensure Zero
equipment breakdown and Zero defects in the product is critical to decision through data
analysis, evaluation of causes, conduct audits, and constant search for greater reliability in
product and process. It is recommended to use the Decision Diagram.
4.1.7
Office TPM
4.1.8
According to Souza (2006), the main objective of the pillar is to implement the
principles of environmental management at the factory, through measures that minimize
environmental impact, ensuring the safety and health of each stakeholder in the process, also
reducing waste and generating increased productivity by reducing accidents. Among the
priorities of the pillar are: fetching zero accidents through reliable equipment, prevention of
human error, and equipment and processes that do not harm the environment.
14
Step 1: Announcement of TPM The company decides to implement the TPM and
compromising in its realization.
Step 2: Diffusion of the method Let everyone aware about what is TPM and do
educative lectures.
Step 3: Create an equip that will coordinate the TPM - The coordinating body assumes
the conduction of the program.
Step 4: Establish a pilot line - Pilot line is necessary to debug the method and improve
learning.
Step 5: Training of managers and supervisors The top management needs to know
the concept of TPM.
Step 7: Prepare documents and procedures - Documents and procedures for small
workgroups.
Step 8: Operators training - Introduction to TPM through rigorous training.
Step 9: Do a program of preventive maintenance for all parts of the equipment.
15
Step 10: Measuring results - Parameters to see the influence of TPM results in areas
that is used.
Step 11: Audit - Developing an audit system to enter the settings of TPM.
5. CONCLUSION
With the study on Total Productive Maintenance, it was possible to understand how
good managed maintenance can benefit a company like MRC Bearings. Analyzing the TPM
from theory to practice, we could have a systematic notion of the techniques used in an
enterprise, encompassing from the senior levels even simple employees.
The overall goal of Total Productive Maintenance is the increased productivity of the
industry, which depends on several factors, and collaboration of the entire team. As the base
TPM are the pillars 8, which bind directly to the types of maintenance, losses and metrics.
In general way, the TPM can be applied both in an industrial sector as an
administrative sector, fostering an environment of pleasant, organized labor and has the
support of all. It is considered a complete project, as it involves many areas of the company
as Production, Quality, Process, Maintenance, Safety and Environment.
Analyzing the qualitative and quantitative results of the implementation of
Autonomous Maintenance and TPM as on the MRC Bearings, shows the feasibility of this
project since investments are minimal compared with the cost reduction, waste and increase
productivity.
For more obstacles that meets for implementation of TPM, the actions for the
implementation of this philosophy must always be considered. It should persist for the
company to achieve its goals and profit from the improvements obtained.
16
REFERENCES
www.administradores.com.br/artigos/carreira/tpm-manutencao-produtiva-total/45081/
[Accessed: 16 October 2014].
Rubrich, Larry (2010) TPM is most difficult of all lean tools to implement. Available at:
www.reliableplant.com/Read/26210/tpm-lean-implement [Accessed: 16 October 2014].
Souza, V. (2006) Organization and Management of Maintenance. So Paulo: All Print.
Wakjira, M W, Singh, A P. (2012) Total Productive Maintenance: A Case Study in
Manufacturing
Industry.
[Online]
Global
Journals
Inc.
Avaiable
17
from:
6. APPRENDICES
18
19
20
21