Title: Time Study
1Time Study
- IENG 311
- Work Methods
- Carter J. Kerk, PhD, PE, CSP, CPE
2Time Study
- Read Chapter 27 and 28 from Konz Johnson, 6th
Edition - Homework, Due Wednesday, September 20th
(beginning of class) - Review Questions
- Chapter 27 p. 545
- Chapter 28 p. 559
3Why Conduct Time Studies?
- You cant manage what you dont measure
- Cost Allocation
- Production Inventory Control
- Evaluation of Alternatives
- Acceptable Days Work
- Incentive Pay
4Normal Pace
- Walk at ? mph, Deal deck in ? Seconds
- Normal Curve (see next slide)
- Think about use for
- Incentives
- Dismissal
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6Discipline Procedure (Example)
Step Description
0 Normal operator, acceptable performance
1 Oral warning
2 Oral warning detailed review of method with supervisor
3 Written warning additional training
4 Written warning some loss of pay
5 Written warning larger loss of pay
6 Discharge from job
7Establishing Time Standards
- Nonengineered (Type 2) Estimates
- Quick and dirty, low cost
- Mostly subjective
- Very little objective
- Examples
- Historical Records
- Ask an expert
- Time Logs
- Occurrence (or Work) Sampling (see Chapter 10)
8Establishing Time Standards
- Engineered (Type I) Estimates
- More accurate than non-engineered (Type II)
- Preceded by a methods and quality analysis
- Mostly objective, very little subjective
characteristics
9Implementing Type I Standards
- Select a logical organizational unit and plan to
set standards for all touch labor in the unit - Orient supervisors and workers
- Improve the work methods
- Determine the time (TS or Standard Data)
- Calculate standards, including allowances
- Check and debug standards implement for a trial
basis (1 month) - Go to full implementation, including discipline
10Implementing Type I Standards
- Also see MIL-STD-1567A on course website. This
addresses Work Measurement
MIL-STD-1567A 3/11/1983 Original Release
MIL-STD-1567A Notice 1 5/3/1986 Update
MIL-STD-1567A Notice 2 1/3-/1987 Update
MIL-STD-1567A Notice 3 2/27/1995 Cancelled
11Time Study
- Observed Time (OT)
- the raw unadjusted time a worker takes
- Normal Time (NT)
- The time an experience worker should take
- NT (OT) (Rating)
- Standard Time (ST)
- NT increased to account for allowances (personal,
fatigue, and delays)
12Standard Data
- Future topic for Chapters 29 and 30
- Predetermined Time Systems
- MTM, MOST, etc.
- Statistical Approach
- Advantage of Standard Data over Time Study
- Cheaper
- Consistency
- Faster
13Allowances
- Normal time is increased by three types of
allowances - Personal
- Fatigue
- Delay
- Shift Allowances or Work Allowances?
- Its a policy decision
- Shift Allowances (a percent of shift time)
- ST NT / (1 Allowances)
- Work Allowances (a percent of work time)
- ST NT ( 1 Allowances)
14Personal Allowances
- Given for activities such as blowing your nose,
visits to the restroom, getting a drink of water,
smoking, etc. - Typically 5
- May or may not be considered part of the 15
minute break at mid-morning and mid-afternoon
and the 30 minute lunch
15Fatigue Allowances
- Given to compensate a worker for time lost due to
fatigue - Given only if fatigue is actually a possibility
- Physical Fatigue Table 27.6 27.8
- Mental Fatigue Table 27.9 27.10
- Environmental Fatigue Table 27.11 27.14
- Points do NOT equal percentages
- See Table 27.4 for summation
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17Physical Fatigue
18Physical Fatigue
19Physical Fatigue
20Mental Fatigue
21Mental Fatigue
22Environmental Fatigue
23Environmental Fatigue
24Environmental Fatigue
25Environmental Fatigue
26Delay Allowances
- These compensate for machine breakdowns,
interrupted material flow, conversations with
supervisors, machine maintenance, cleaning, etc. - Record delays during a long sampling period using
time study or work sampling (occurrence sampling)
and calculate the percent of time in delay.
27Learning
- The amount of time to complete a task improves
with practice - This is a natural process that has proven to be
predictable statistically - Learning components cognitive and motor learning
- Studied by Wright (1936)
- Cycle Time a(cum of cycles)b
- Plotted on log-log is a straight line
- See Figures 27.4 27.6
28Learning Curve
29Learning Curve
30Learning Curve
31Learning, Continued
- Variable a is the time to complete the first
cycle - Variable b is dependent on the rate of
learning, either calculate or look up in Table
27.15 - Improvement between doubled quantities is
consistent
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3395 Learning Curve Example
34Typical Values for Learning
- Cognitive learning has greater improvement (70
curve), while motor learning is slower (90
curve) - 98.5 Grinding
- 90 Bench Inspection
- 84 Cigar Making
- 80 Keyboard Entry
- 68 Truck Body Assembly
35Timing Techniques
- Stopwatch
- Snapback
- Continuous
- Videotape
- With burned-in timer to at least 0.00 sec
- Many advantages to videotape
- Permanent, can be viewed many times, freeze
frame, frame by frame advance, slow motion,
shuttle speed, forward and backward, use with
stopwatch, pace rating, training
36Number of Observations
- There are two approaches to determining the
number of observations - Statistical
- Importance of Decision
- Applying some common sense/practicality
37Statistical Determination of Number of
Observations
- Goal Trying to estimate the population mean
from the sample mean - Sample means are not precise
- To improve precision, you can increase the sample
size, but this increases the cost of sampling
38Statistical Determination of Sample Size
- The number of observations to record depends on
- Accuracy desired
- Confidence desired
- Data variability
- Due to operation variation
39Accuracy Desired
- Relative or Absolute Terms
- Case 1 0.2 hour element (12 min)
- /- 5 relative accuracy is the same as an
absolute accuracy of .2(.05) 0.01 h for a range
of 0.19 to 0.21 hours. The target width is 0.02
hours - Case 2 0.02 hour element (1.2 min 72 s)
- /- 5 relative accuracy is the same as an
absolute accuracy of .02(.05) 0.001 h for a
range of 0.019 to 0.021 - Both have a /- 5 relative accuracy, but the
absolute accuracy is 10 times different!
40Accuracy Desired
- The size of the target determines the number of
shots needed to hit it. - It is more difficult to hit a smaller target, so
more shots are needed, or a larger sample size. - People are often not precise in their statements.
They may say 5 accuracy, without specifying
whether it is absolute or relative.
41Confidence Required
- For 90 confidence, you want shots to hit the
target 90 of the time. - With 90 confidence with /- 5 accuracy for a
0.02 h element, means that if there were 100
different time studies, in 90 of the studies, the
time study mean would be between 0.019 and 0.021
h.
42Estimating Number of Observations
- Statistical Formulas
- See Box 28.1
- See Ergo Disk
- See IENG 381/382
- Importance of Decision (Estimating)
- See next two tables
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45Workplace Terminology
- Assembly Line
- Job Shop
- Flexible Workstation
- Work Cell
- Warehouse
- Receiving
- Shipping
- Order Fulfillment
- Kitting