Oee Y Kpi S: Edson Orbe Sanchez Jorge Emmanuel Orozco Piña Brandon Vega Ventura Luis Ricardo Equipo 7
Oee Y Kpi S: Edson Orbe Sanchez Jorge Emmanuel Orozco Piña Brandon Vega Ventura Luis Ricardo Equipo 7
Oee Y Kpi S: Edson Orbe Sanchez Jorge Emmanuel Orozco Piña Brandon Vega Ventura Luis Ricardo Equipo 7
OEE y KPI´S
EDSON
ORBE SANCHEZ JORGE EMMANUEL
OROZCO PIÑA BRANDON
VEGA VENTURA LUIS RICARDO
EQUIPO 7
Who created the OEE? 2
Let’s start with All Time. This is also called 24/7 time (it includes every minute of every day).
From All Time, you subtract Schedule Loss, which includes all time that should be excluded
from OEE analysis because there is no intention of running production during this time
(e.g., plant shutdowns, breaks/lunches, or periods where there are no orders).
Now we will look at the three OEE factors, each of which takes into account a different type
of loss. They are Availability, Performance and Quality.
The three OEE factors
6
Availability
Availability Loss, which includes any events that stop planned production for an
appreciable length of time, such as equipment failures and material shortages,
and Planned Stops (such as changeover time).
Performance
Performance Loss is anything that causes the manufacturing process to run at less than
the maximum possible speed when it is running (including both Slow Cycles and Small
Stops), such machine wear, substandard materials and jams.
The three OEE factors
7
QUALITY
Quality takes into account Quality Loss, which accounts for manufactured parts that do not
meet quality standards.
Examples of things that create Quality Loss include scrap and parts that need rework.
8
Six Big Losses 9
Six Big Losses 10
Equipment Failure
It’s any significant period of time in
which equipment is scheduled for
production but is not running due
a failure of some sort.
Examples of common reasons for
equipment failure include tooling
failure, breakdowns, and
unplanned maintenance.
Six Big Losses 11
Reduced Yield
It describe defective parts produced
from startup until stable (steady-
state) production is reached. This
includes scrapped parts as well as
parts that can be reworked.
Examples: suboptimal changeovers,
incorrect settings when a new part is
run, equipment that needs warmup
cycles, or equipment that inherently
creates waste after startup (e.g., a
web press).
16
Hidden factory
WHAT IS THE HIDDEN FACTORY? 17
The term “hidden factory” was popularized by Armand
Feigenbaum in the late 1970’s. Feigenbaum’s concept of the
hidden factory was primarily focused on quality, specifically the
waste and costs caused by “bad work”, much of which is “hidden”
below the surface of day-to-day operations.
Hidden factory 18
factory?
Second, calculate your Hidden Factory by subtracting Fully
Productive Time from All Time (24/7). This Hidden Factory time
represents the untapped capacity of your manufacturing plant.
How to calculate the hidden 25
factory?
The hidden factory takes into account all four types of lost time
described earlier: Schedule Loss, Availability Loss, Performance Loss,
and Quality Loss.
BENEFITS OF TAPPING INTO YOUR HIDDEN FACTORY 26
The most significant benefit of tapping into your hidden factory is that you can
increase throughput without additional capital expenditures. Simply put – making
more with what you already have. When you increase throughput, this enables
three big benefits:
Decreased Conversion Cost: Fixed costs are spread over more output (increasing
profitability)
BENEFITS OF TAPPING INTO YOUR HIDDEN
27
FACTORY
Increased Flexibility: Shorter production runs are possible, improving lead times
and reducing inventory.
Deferred Spend: Increase throughput on existing assets and defer spending on
new equipment or facilities.
BENEFITS OF TAPPING INTO YOUR HIDDEN 28
FACTORY
At the factory-floor level, tapping into your hidden factory can decrease
overtime or eliminate outsourced production.
29
OEE calculation
SIMPLE CALCULATION 30
The simplest way to calculate OEE is as the ratio of Fully Productive
Time to Planned Production Time.
PREFERRED CALCULATION 31
The preferred OEE calculation is based on the three OEE
Factors: Availability, Performance, and Quality.
Example 32
33
What is KPI ?
34
KPI means: Key Performance Indicators.
KPI’s characteristics
35
• A KPI must be measurable 36
• A KPI is expressed as a percentage. 37
• KPI’s must be achievable. 38
39
• Any KPI must be relevant
40
• A KPI is measured very frequently
41
• We must have a KPI available on time
42
• KPI’s always promote actions
Questions we must ask to know how to
choose KPI’s correctly.
43
• What goals and objectives do we pursue? 44
• Do such KPI’s influence the goals of the 45
company?
46
• Are our indexes are comparable?
• Which department of the company will be the 47
manager of the KPI?
• How often are the progresses going to be evaluated? 48
49
• Who will measure the KPI’s and with what tools?
50
What personnel will take the actions based on the result of
the KPI’s?
51
• Will the KPI help us calculate the ROI (Return On investment)?
52
Example of
performance
monitoring
Example Machine
53
with quick
change of
tooling
taking into account that
a SMED work has been
carried out on the
production line shown,
to try to reduce the tool
change time from A to
B, which initially was 15
minutes.
Example Indicates that there is something that
affects the improvements introduced,
54
and that should be worked on, or the
performance is not sustainable
current go
al
55
Dashboards QCDSM
Dashboards 56