Value Stream Mapping Flashcards

1
Q

Five Principles of Lean Thinking

A

Value- Specify value from the standpoint of the customer
Value stream- identify the value stream for each product
Flow- make value flow without interuptions
Pull- let the customer pull value from the next upstream activity
Perfection- pursue perfection

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2
Q

Definition of Lean

A

The identification and elimination of waste

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3
Q

Definition of waste

A

Any part of the process that adds no value

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4
Q

What is value stream?

A

All steps, value added and non value added, required to bring the product from raw material to customer

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5
Q

Value Stream mapping

A

Follow a product’s production path from beginning to end, and draw a visual representation of every process material and information flow

Allows to see and understand the flow of material and information as a product makes its way through the value stream

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6
Q

VSM- Advantages

A
  • Helps to visualise flow
  • Allows to identify sources of waste easier
  • shows links of information and material flow
  • provides a common language for talking about manufacturing processes
  • allows to describe in detail how the plant should operate in order to create flow
  • forms the basis of an implementation plan
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7
Q

Value Stream Manager

A
  • required for value stream
  • for product ownership beyond functions
  • value stream manager should make their progress reports to the top manager on site
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8
Q

What is waste?

A

Elements of production that add no value to product.

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9
Q

Things to remember about waste

A
  • waste is really a symptom not a root cause
  • waste point to problems in the system
  • to eliminate waste find and address the root causes
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10
Q

Japanese define waste as:

A
  • Muda (unproductive)
  • Mura (unevenness)
  • Muri (overburden)
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11
Q

Overproduction

A

1 cause of waste

  • making more than is required by the next process
  • making it earlier than is required by the next process
  • making it faster than is required by the next process
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12
Q

Takt Time

A

-synchronises pace of production to match pace of sales

Takt = Available working time/ customer demand

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13
Q

Takt time production impact

A

Producing faster:

  • requires more operators
  • generates inventories
  • results in increased waste

Producing slower
-failing to achieve customer demand

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14
Q

Supermarket pull systems

A
  • customer process goes to supermarket and withdraws what they need when they need it
  • supplying process produces to replenish what was withdrawn
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15
Q

Standardised work

A

-established precise procedures (working sequence) for each operator’s work in a production process

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16
Q

pros of standardised work

A
  • documentation of the current process for all shifts
  • best practice- reduced variability, increased predictability
  • ensures safety
  • helps operators to meet customer demand
17
Q

Standardised work combination table

A

-visual representatino of the combination of manual work time, walk time and machine processing tme for each operator in a production sequence

18
Q

Pros of a Standardised work combination table

A
  • shows the interaction between operator and machines in a process
  • displace more detail and is more precise than the operator balance chart
  • easy to see where work can be redistributed amongst the operators
19
Q

Installed capacity

A

Available time/Bottleneck Cycle Time