Block 5 - lecture 1 Flashcards
What does ‘attribute’ refer to?
when a quality characteristic comforms or doesn’t conform to specifications (pass/fail)
When are attributes used?
measurements are:
- not possible
- time consuming
- costly
- not needed
When aren’t measurements possible?
- visibly inspected eg. colour, missing parts, damage
Example of quantitative measures being too time consuming?
vernier vs go-no-go gauge
nonconformity?
part doesn’t meet specification
defect?
part doesn’t meet usage requirement
nonconforming unit?
an example of the product or service that has a nonconformity
limitations of control charts for variables?
- don’t work when the quality characteristics are attributes
- an Xbar and R chart for each characteristic could be expensive
types of attribute charts for nonconformity?
- p chart
- np chart
p charts?
a Proportion chart showing the proportion nonconforming in the subgroup (% or 0.)
np charts?
Number of nonconforming
types of attribute charts for nonconformities?
- c chart
- u chart
c chart?
count of nonconformities on single units
downside of p charts?
- typically low proportion nonconforming means large subgroups are needed
- less sensitive to variation than Xbar and R
possible uses of a p chart?
- control a characteristic (like with Xbar and R), a group of characteristics or the entire product
- determine average quality level
- show changes in the average
- show improvements / effectiveness of ideas
- measure performance of operators and management
- determine acceptance before shipment to customer