Managing OEE To Optimize Factory Performance PDF
Managing OEE To Optimize Factory Performance PDF
Managing OEE To Optimize Factory Performance PDF
1. Introduction
"If you can not measure it, you can not improve it."(Lord Kelvin)
It is a common opinion that productivity improvement is nowadays the biggest challenge for
companies in order to remain competitive in a global market [1, 2]. A well-known way of
measuring the effectiveness is the Overall Equipment Efficiency (OEE) index. It has been firstly
developed by the Japan Institute for Plant Maintenance (JIPM) and it is widely used in many
industries. Moreover it is the backbone of methodologies for quality improvement as TQM
and Lean Production.
The strength of the OEE index is in making losses more transparent and in highlighting areas
of improvement. OEE is often seen as a catalyst for change and it is easy to understand as a lot
of articles and discussion have been generated about this topic over the last years.
The aim of this chapter is to answer to general questions as what to measure? how to measure?
and how to use the measurements? in order to optimize the factory performance. The goal is to
show as OEE is a good base for optimizing the factory performance. Moreover OEEs evolu
tions are the perfect response even in advanced frameworks.
This chapter begins with an explanation of the difference between efficiency, effectiveness and
productivity as well as with a formal definition for the components of effectiveness. Mathe
matical formulas for calculating OEE are provided too.
After the introduction to the fundamental of OEE, some interesting issues concerning the
way to implement the index are investigated. Starting with the question that in calculat
ing OEE you have to take into consideration machines as operating in a linked and complex
environment. So we analyze almost a model for the OEE calculation that lets a wider
approach to the performance of the whole factory. The second issue concerns with
monitoring the factory performance through OEE. It implies that information for decision-
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making have to be guaranteed real-time. It is possible only through automated systems for
calculating OEE and through the capability to collect a large amount of data. So we propose
an examination of the main automated OEE systems from the simplest to high-level
systems integrated into ERP software. Even data collection strategies are screened for
rigorous measurement of OEE.
The last issue deals with how OEE has evolved into tools like TEEP, PEE, OFE, OPE and OAE
in order to fit with different requirements.
At the end of the chapter, industrial examples of OEE application are presented and the results
are discussed.
2. Fundamentals of OEE
Overall equipment efficiency or effectiveness (OEE) is a hierarchy of metrics proposed by
Seiichi Nakajima [3] to measure the performance of the equipment in a factory. OEE is a really
powerful tool that can be used also to perform diagnostics as well as to compare production
units in differing industries. The OEE has born as the backbone of Total Productive Mainte
nance (TPM) and then of other techniques employed in asset management programs, Lean
manufacturing [4], Six Sigma [5], World Class Manufacturing [4].
By the end of the 1980s, the concept of Total Production Maintenance became more widely
known in the Western world [7] and along with it OEE implementation too. From then on an
extensive literature [8-11] made OEE accessible and feasible for many Western companies.
ValuableOperatingTime
LoadingTime
(1)
where:
Valuable Operating Time is the net time during which the equipment actually produces an
acceptable product;
Loading Time is the actual number of hours that the equipment is expected to work in a
specific period (year, month, week, or day).
The formula indicates how much the equipment is doing what it is supposed to do and it
captures the degree of conforming to output requirements. It is clearly a measure of effective
ness.
OEE is not only a metric, but it also provides a framework to improve the process. A model
for OEE calculation aims to point out each aspect of the process that can be ranked for
improvement. To maximize equipment effectiveness it is necessary to bring the equipment to
peak operating conditions and then keeping it there by eliminating or at least minimizing any
factor that might diminish its performance. In other words a model for OEE calculation should
be based on the identification of any losses that prevent equipment from achieving its
maximum effectiveness.
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The OEE calculation model is then designed to isolate losses that degrade the equipment
effectiveness.
5. Losses analysis
Losses are activities that absorb resources without creating value. Losses can be divided by
their frequency of occurrence, their cause and by different types they are. The latter one has
been developed by Nakajima [3] and it is the well-known Six Big Losses framework. The other
ones are interesting in order to rank rightly losses.
According to Johnson et al. [12], losses can be chronic or sporadic. The chronic disturbances
are usually described as small, hidden and complicated while the sporadic ones occur quickly
and with large deviations from the normal value. The loss frequency combined with the loss
severity gives a measure of the damage and it is useful in order to establish the order in which
the losses have to be removed. This classification makes it possible to rank the losses and
remove them on the basis of their seriousness or impact on the organization.
Regarding divide losses by their causes, three different ones can be found:
1.
machine malfunctioning: an equipment or a part of this does not fulfill the demands;
2.
3.
external: cause of losses that cannot be improved by the maintenance or production team.
The external causes such as shortage of raw materials, lack of personnel or limited demand do
not touch the equipment effectiveness. They are of great importance for top management and
they should be examined carefully because their reduction can directly increase the revenues
and profit. However they are not responsible of the production or maintenance team and so
they are not taken into consideration through the OEE metric.
To improve the equipment effectiveness the losses because of external causes have to be taken
out and the losses caused by machine malfunctioning and process, changeable by the daily
organization, can still be divided into:
Down time losses: when the machine should run, but it stands still. Most common down
time losses happen when a malfunction arises, an unplanned maintenance task must be
done in addition to the big revisions or a set-up/start-up time occurs.
Speed losses: the equipment is running, but it is not running at its maximum designed
speed. Most common speed losses happen when equipment speed decrease but it is not
zero. It can depend on a malfunctioning, a small technical imperfections, like stuck pack
aging or because of the start-up of the equipment related to a maintenance task, a setup or
a stop for organizational reasons.
Quality losses: the equipment is producing products that do not fully meet the specified
quality requirements. Most common quality losses occur because equipment, in the time
between start-up and completely stable throughput, yields products that do not conform to
quality demand or not completely. They even happen because an incorrect functioning of
the machine or because process parameters are not tuned to standard.
The framework in which we have divided losses in down time, speed and quality losses
completely fits with the Six Big Losses model proposed by Nakajima [3] and that we summarize
in the Table 1:
Category
Big losses
DOWNTIME
- Breakdown
- Set-up and adjustments
SPEED
QUALITY
- Quality losses
- Reduced yield
On the base of Six Big Losses model, it is possible to understand how the Loading Time
decreases until to the Valuable Operating Time and the effectiveness is compromised. Lets go
through the next Figure 2.
CALENDAR TIME
LOADING TIME
OPERATING TIME
Planned downtime
Breakdown
Set-up and
adjustments
Minor stoppages
Reduced speed
Quality losses
Reduced yield
(2)
(3)
Availability ( A) =
Performance (P ) =
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Quality (Q ) =
(4)
(5)
and
OEE =
Operating Time
Loading Time
(6)
finally
OEE = Availability Performance Quality
(7)
So through a bottom-up approach based on the Six Big Losses model, OEE breaks the per
formance of equipment into three separate and measurable components: Availability, Per
formance and Quality.
Availability: it is the percentage of time that equipment is available to run during the total
possible Loading Time. Availability is different than Utilization. Availability only includes
the time the machine was scheduled, planned, or assigned to run. Utilization regards all
hours of the calendar time. Utilization is more effective in capacity planning and analyzing
fixed cost absorption. Availability looks at the equipment itself and focuses more on variable
cost absorption. Availability can be even calculated as:
Availability =
(8)
Performance: it is a measure of how well the machine runs within the Operating Time.
Performance can be even calculated as:
Performance =
(9)
Quality: it is a measure of the number of parts that meet specification compared to how
many were produced. Quality can be even calculated as:
Quality =
(10)
After the various factors are taken into account, all the results are expressed as a percentage
that can be viewed as a snapshot of the current equipment effectiveness.
The value of the OEE is an indication of the size of the technical losses (machine malfunctioning
and process) as a whole. The gap between the value of the OEE and 100% indicates the share
of technical losses compared to the Loading Time.
The compound effect of Availability, Performance and Quality provides surprising results, as
visualized by e.g. Louglin [13].
Lets go through a practical example in the Table 2.
Availability
86,7%
Performance
93%
Quality
95%
OEE
76,6%
The example in Table 2 illustrates the sensitivity of the OEE measure to a low and combined
performance. Consequently, it is impossible to reach 100 % OEE within an industrial context.
Worldwide studies indicate that the average OEE rate in manufacturing plants is 60%. As
pointed out by e.g. Bicheno [14] world class level of OEE is in the range of 85 % to 92 % for
non-process industry. Clearly, there is room for improvement in most manufacturing plants!
The challenge is, however, not to peak on those levels but thus to exhibit a stable OEE at worldclass level [15].
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to point out these loss types. In most processes recording data for Cycle Time analysis needs
to be automated since the cycles are as quick as they do not leave adequate time for manual
data logging. By comparing all cycles to the theoretical Cycle Time, the losses can be
automatically clustered for analysis. It is important to analyze Minor stoppages and
Reduced speed separately because the root causes are typically very different.
Quality losses and Reduced yield: parts that require rework of any kind should be
considered rejects. Tracking when rejects occur and the type is critical to point out potential
causes, and in many cases patterns will be discovered. Often a Six Sigma program, where a
common metric is achieving a defect rate of less than 3.4 defects per million opportunities,
is used to focus attention on a goal of zero defects.
= OEE
Loading Time
Calendar Time
(11)
OEE and TEEP are thus two closely related measurements. Typically the equipment is on site
and thus TEEP is metric that shows how well equipment is utilized. TEEP is useful for business
analysis and important to maximize before spending capital dollars for more capacity.
PEE stands for Production Equipment Efficiency and it was firstly proposed by Raouf [18].
The main difference from OEE is that each item is weighted. So Availability, Performance, and
Quality dont have an equal importance as it happens for OEE.
At the level of the factory we found Overall Factory Effectiveness (OFE), Overall Production
Effectiveness (OPE), and Overall Asset Effectiveness (OAE) metrics. OFE is the most
widespread and well known in literature. It covers the effort to export the OEE tool to the
whole factory. The question is what kind of method should be applied to OEE values from all
pieces of equipment, to derive the factory level metric. There is no standard method or metrics
for the measurement or analysis of OFE [19]. Huang [20] stated that the factory level metric
can be computed by synthesizing the subsystem level metrics, capturing their interconnectivity
information.
OPE and OAE are extensively implemented in industry under different formulations. They
involve a practical approach developed to fit the specific requirements of different industries.
(12)
(13)
and
OEE =
Here OEE measures effectiveness in term of output that is easy to be taken out at factory level
too. So OFE becomes:
OFE =
(14)
It is not always ideal. The complexity of OEE measurement arises where single or multiple
sub-cells are constrained by an upstream or downstream operation or bottleneck operation.
The flow is always restricted or limited by a bottleneck operation, just as a chain is only as
strong as its weakest link. So according to Goldratt [22] we can measure OEE in real time at
the bottleneck. Any variations at the bottleneck correlate directly to upstream and downstream
process performance. Huang et al. [23] proposed a manufacturing system modeling approach,
which captures the equipment interconnectivity information. It identifies four unique subsys
tems (series, parallel, assembly and expansion) as a basis for modeling a manufacturing
system, as shown in Figure 3.
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Muthiah et al. [24] developed the approach to derive OTE metrics for these subsystems based
on a system constraint approach that automatically takes into account equipment idle time.
Other methods are based on modeling the manufacturing systems. Some of these notable
approaches are queuing analysis methods [25], Markovian methods [26], Petri net based
methods [27], integrated computer-aided manufacturing definition (IDEF) method [28], and
structured analysis and design technique (SADT) [29]. In addition to them there are several
commercial tools that have been reviewed and categorized by Muthiah and Huang [30].
be even used to compare performance across the factory highlighting poor line performance
or to quantify improvements made [31]. Moreover improving can be pursued by:
Backtracking to determine what loss reduces effectiveness.
Identifying bottlenecks as not only the slowest machine, but as the machine both slower and
less effective.
All these goals need of an approach based on the Deming Cycle [32]. It is an improvement
cycle to increase the plant OEE rating until the target goals and world class manufacturing
status are achieved (Figure 4)
This approach requires a large amount of data that can be provided both in a static or dynamic
way. In the first case data are picked up only at the end of a certain period and used in the
Diagnosis & Analysis stage.
There is another way to use OEE and it is to know exactly what is happening in real time
through a continuous monitoring to immediately identify possible problems and react in realtime using appropriate corrective actions. Information on OEE items (maintenance and
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The quality of the input data is likely to increase in alignment with an increase in the
competence of the staff;
2.
The involvement of the operators in identifying performance loss factors is likely to create
a better engagement for providing the system with accurate information.
Another issue to overcome is the balance between the efforts of providing adequate informa
tion in relation to the level of detail needed in the improvement process. In fact if a critical
success factor in an improvement project driven by OEE is the retrieval of detailed information
about production losses, however not all the improvement projects require a higher and really
expensive data precision.
Generally there are many companies in which manual data collection is convenient. In other
companies where each operator is responsible for a number of processing machines, timely
and accurate data collection can be very challenging and a key goal should be fast and efficient
data collection, with data put it to use throughout the day and in real-time, a more desirable
approach would be realized if each machine could indicate data by itself.
An automatic OEE data recording implies:
better accuracy;
less labor;
traceability;
integrated reporting and analysis;
immediate corrective action;
motivation for operators.
In any case the implementation of data collection for OEE has limited value if it is not integrated
in a continuous work procedure, as a part of the improvement initiative. Daily meeting and
sharing information both cross-functionally and bottom-up in the organization hierarchy
become a prerequisite. As well as it is useful integrating OEE into an automated management
system. OEE can be applied when using a total manufacturing information system providing
the detailed historical information that allows thorough diagnoses and improvement plans
but more importantly it gives the summary signals.
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capabilities. They are able to gather and coordinate the operations of a plant and provide
measurable information. The advantages are that database are completely integrated so the
coordination among different functions involved is better. For example manufacturing can see
the upcoming planned maintenance and maintenance can see the production schedules.
Automated Management systems are naturally and inherently eligible for providing feasible
decision support on plant profitability and establish a foundation for addressing other
manufacturing challenges in the future.
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A standard definition of OEE must be clearly defined and communicated at all levels within
the organization since this is the foundation for its utilization. It is especially important to
determine how the ideal cycle time and planned and unplanned downtime should be
interpreted.
Involving the operators in the process of defining production loss causes and configuring
the templates and lists to be used for monitoring promotes operator commitment, under
standing of the procedure and awareness of the frequency of sporadic and chronic distur
bances.
Driving the OEE implementation as a project with a predefined organization, a structured
working procedure promoting cross-functional and shop floor involvement, and practical
guidance on what activities to execute and in what order, implies resource allocation that
forces management attention and puts OEE on the agenda.
Viewing and communicating OEE as a driver for improvements rather than a management
measure for follow-up and control of performance (although this is also the case) is one of
the cornerstones for a successful OEE implementation.
Active involvement of the support functions, especially production engineering and
maintenance, is required, otherwise the level of improvements to increase OEE will not be
enough and the speed of change will consequently be too low.
Separating improvement actions into those directly having an impact on process stability,
i.e. OEE, from those with indirect impact is necessary especially in the initial implementation
phase to show quick results.
Including reporting OEE and prioritized daily actions in the routines of daily follow-up
meetings (from team level to department/site level) is an excellent way to integrate OEE as
a driver for improvements in the operations management system.
Results should be communicated, e.g. by graphical visualization of the OEE improvements
on the boards. Visualizing OEE and process output together are illustrative and motivating.
Including production performance in the company s overall production strategy and
managing this with a continuous follow up of OEE as a KPI on different consolidation levels
is the optimal driver for efficient management. When top management attention is contin
uously given to the process of achieving stable production processes the possibilities of
reaching good results certainly increases.
13. Conclusion
There are many challenges associated with the implementation of OEE for monitoring and
managing production performance, for example:
how it is defined, interpreted and compared
how the OEE data are collected and analyzed
Author details
Raffaele Iannone1 and Maria Elena Nenni2*
*Address all correspondence to: [email protected]
1 Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Salerno, Italy
2 Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Naples Federico II, Italy
References
[1] Fleischer, J, Weismann, U, & Niggeschmidt, S. Calculation and Optimisation Model
for Costs and Effects of Availability Relevant Service Elements: proceedings of the
CIRP International Conference on Life Cycle Engineering, LCE2006, 31 May- 2 June
(2006). Leuven, Belgium.
[2] Huang, S. H, Dismukes, J. P, Mousalam, A, Razzak, R. B, & Robinson, D. E. Manufac
turing Productivity improvement using effectiveness metrics and simulation analy
sis. International Journal of Production Research (2003). , 41(3), 513-527.
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