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Group Technology

By: Abdul Latheef


Oct 23,2010
Calicut

What will be Covered?

An introduction to group technology.


Group technology coding structures.
How group technology will help
improve quality.
The benefits and obstacles for
managers using group technology.

Introduction

Group technology was introduced by


Frederick Taylor in 1919 as a way to
improve productivity.

One of long term benefits of group


technology is it helps implement a
manufacturing strategy aimed at
greater automation.

What is group technology?


Group technology (GT) is a
manufacturing philosophy that
seeks to improve productivity by
grouping parts and products
with similar characteristics into
families and forming production
cells with a group of dissimilar
machines and processes.

Background
The introduction of GT techniques in:
General Electric
Lockheed Missiles and Space Co.
Boeing

GT viewed as:
An essential step in the move toward
factory automation.
A necessary step in maintaining a high
quality level and profitable production.

**Brainstorming**
How can group
technology be
used in your
organization?

Group Technology

Group technology implementation


can be broken down into 3 different
phases:

Actions on the manufacturing process


Changes to the production process
Results for the organization

Examples of the impacts group


technology has had on the
production process.

Implementation Phases
Group technology
has the following
actions on the
manufacturing
process:

Part Simplification

Process
Standardization

Production Control

Implementation Phases
The changes group technologies can
have on the production process.

Tighter Parts Control

Close physical layout of machine groups

Orderings tied to production

Implementation Phases
The results that group technologies
have at the organizational level.

Systematic design and redesign

High-quality level

Less process planning time and setup time

Impacts of Group Technology


Different impacts group technology
has on the production process:

Reduced purchasing cost

Accurate cost estimation

A more efficient process

Quicker design changes

Less redundant purchases.

Standardized Parts

Improved customer service

Classification builds customer relationships

A Classification Scheme
Coding Structures for Purchasing
GT

coding is the process of


assigning symbols, numerics, and
letters to a particular attribute of a
particular item

There are 3 different coding


structures
Monocodes
Polycodes
Hybrid(mixed-mode)

codes

Effects of Classification
The automated GT coding
system using bar-code
technology can:

Improve accuracy and productivity in


identifying similar purchased items

Facilitate communication between


the buyer and the vendor

Improving Quality
The cluster algorithms of Group
Technology can be classified into two
major classes.

Design-oriented approach

Relies on the design features of parts to


perform the necessary analysis

Production-oriented approach

Based on routing information to group parts


or machines

Improving Quality
The production-oriented approach can
be divided into two phases:

A design phase

The number of completely new designs can


be kept to a minimum
Workers are more familiar with the parts.
Quality can be maintained at a high level by
using proper design

A manufacturing phase

The grouping of parts based on similar


characteristics
Geometric features
Processing Requirements

Implementing a Classification
Scheme
The three steps of implementing
Group Technology in the process
based approach:
1.

2.

3.

Analyzing the flow of parts through the


shop
Coding parts and then grouping them into
families based on their manufacturing
processes
Making machine group selections.

A Real World Example


Using GT to improve quality.

Peony Corporation, in Japan

Currently: Produces television sets


Problem: Customers requested different
sizes and functions
Challenge: To maintain a high level of quality
due to many new parts
Implementation: At the design phase
Results: Peony kept the number of parts
small by increasing part standardization
lowered costs

Managerial Benefits
The Benefits of Group
Technology Classification:
1.

Reduced Purchasing Cost Through


Volume Purchasing

2.

Faster Lead Time

3.

Can purchase fewer different items at


higher volumes
Can quickly identify the materials or
materials needed

Better Negotiation Leverage

Value Analysis

Managerial Benefits
The Benefits of Group Technology
Classification (cont.):
4.

Accurate Cost Estimation

5.

Quicker Reaction to Design Changes

6.

Estimate the future price range with a


standard cost database
Quickly identify newer material or parts that
conform to newer designs and
specifications

Better Communication Between the Buyer


and the Supplier

Eliminate the human errors with GT


classification

Potential Obstacles
The Obstacles of Group
Technology Classification:
1.

Management Resistance to Change

2.

Extensive Data Requirements

3.

Unwilling to devote the time and energy


The proper identification needs detailed
item descriptions extensive purchase
records/data

High Start-Up Cost

Item characteristics are not available


without the aid of automated information
storage and retrieval systems which usually
incur high expenses until GT is in place

Exercise

Reflecting back, each person write


down:

How group technology can improve your


organization?
List potential obstacles an organization might
face when implementing a group technology
system and explain how each obstacle can
be overcome?

How does this exercise relate to your


organization?

Discuss your answers with the group.

Exercise Discussion
Improvements Group Technology can
make on an organization:

Improve quality levels


More profitable production
Reduces costs

Ways to overcome obstacles an


organization might face:

Promote the change from within the


organization
Properly train the individuals who work with
the system

Summary
There are many benefits and obstacles
toward the use of group technology
in an organization.
All things considered, GT is viewed as:
An essential step in the move toward
factory automation.
A necessary step in maintaining a high
quality level and profitable production.

Bibliography

Bourke, Richard and Kempfer, Lisa.


Achieving Success with Mass
Customization: The Vital Contribution
of Engineering. Computer Aided
Engineering. (Oct 1999).

Ham, Inyoung, Katsundo, Hitomi and


Teruhiko, Yoshida. Group
Technology: Application to Production
Management. Boston, MA: Hingham,
1985.

Bibliography

Kroll, Denis and Wang, Xiaoli. Using


group technology to improve quality
and response time. Industrial
Management. (July 1994).

Manocher, Djassemi. An efficient


CNC programming approach based
on group technology. Journal of
Manufacturing Systems. (2000).

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