7 Control
7 Control
7 Control
Of all the tools for analyzing data, the control chart is the most useful. No
other tool captures the voice of your process better. Control charts are used
to determine whether your process is operating in statistical control. Until it
Data
is, any improvement efforts are, at best, mere process tampering. Basically,
Data
process. These changes will be signalled byabnormal points on the graph.
Extensive research by Dr. Shewhart indicated that by establishing upper
and lower limits at three times the standard deviation of the process (plus
and minus, respectively), 99.73% of the common cause variation would fall
within these limits.
A process is said , therefore, to be in statistical control when the process
measurements vary randomly within the control limits; that is, the variation
present in the process is consistent and predictable over time.
The upper and lower control limits are not the same as tolerance or
specification limits.
Control limits are a function of the way your process actually performs over
time. Specification, or tolerance, limits are a function of what your process
may have been designed to do and may not necessarily have any direct
relationship to the actual performance of the process.
Data
need.
Control charts use two types of data: variables data and attributes data. In
general, if you want to use variables data, you have to take measurements in
units such as length, temperature, etc. On the other hand, attributes data
requires a good/bad or go/no-go decision and counting (for example,
number of defects, percent late, etc.).
Construct the control charts
charts.. Once you have determined the type of data to
collect, follow the appropriate chart construction techniques described
elsewhere in this section.
X Average
X
STEP ONE
ONE: Is a Control Chart the appropriate tool to use?
Data
Data
X Chart (if subgroups of five or less)
DEFECT
DEFECT: A failure to meet one part of an acceptance criteria
Data
One or more Seven or more consec- Six points in a row
points outside the utive points on one side steadily increasing or
control limits. of the centerline. decreasing.
Points to Remember:
Upper and lower control limits are not specification limits. They have a
mathematical relationship to the process outputs. Specification limits are
based on product or customer requirements.
Be sure you have selected the correct control chart for the type of data you
are collecting.
Having a data point fall outside the control limits is only one of many
different signals that indicate a process is out of control. If all the data
points are within the control limits, be sure to check the other signals that
indicate a special cause of variation.
Coast Guard Process Improvement Guide 63