Title: Lean Manufacturing and Just-In-Time Philosophy
1Lean Manufacturing and Just-In-Time Philosophy
2Basic Idea
- Try to eliminate the system operational
inefficiencies and the resulting waste by - trying to produce the right items in the right
quantities and quality at the right time through
the right procedures. - In the emerging philosophy, inventories should be
carefully controlled and they should not function
as the mechanism for accommodating the system
inefficiencies gt Just-In-Time (JIT) - The aforementioned effort should an ongoing
process towards continuous improvement rather
than one-time/shot effort.
3Enabling factors and practices of the lean
manufacturing philosophy
- Reduce the variability in the system
- input
- quality of raw material
- delivery times
- operation
- processing times
- process capability
- (smaller) lot sizes
- output
- production volume
- production scope
4Enabling factors and practices of the lean
manufacturing philosophy (cont.)
- Timely and reliable information flow across the
entire supply chain through - stable, long-lasting and trustful relationships
between the different parties in the supply chain - flexible / electronic ordering mechanisms
- Electronic Data Interchange (EDI), and
- e-commerce practices
- vendor owned and managed inventories
5Enabling factors and practices of the lean
manufacturing philosophy (cont.)
- Reliable and flexible production and transport
systems - establishment of well-tuned processes with
predictable and controllable performance gt
Statistical Process Control (SPC) - reduction of set-up times through the adoption of
- flexible equipment
- standardization of designs and production methods
- externalization of set-up tasks
- introduction of mistake-proofing techniques like
- explicit checklists
- integrated machine gages
- real-time linkage of the transport carriers to
the corporate headquarters / operational planning
center through mobile telephony and global
positioning systems
6Enabling factors and practices of the lean
manufacturing philosophy (cont.)
- Well-trained, responsive and responsible /
empowered personnel - knowledge management
- quality circles
- employee ownership of the processes and their
results - flattened (middle) management structures
7Push versus Pull production control schemes
- Push (MRP-type) control schemes Predict the
demand and try to initiate and coordinate
production in order to meet these predictions
under the available production capacity. - Pull control schemes Assuming a stable demand
rate, establish the production capacity and the
Work-In-Process (WIP) levels that will allow the
system to meet demand as it occurs. - Generated demand consumes the existing WIPs and
authorizes new (replacing) production, through a
card-based mechanism known as KANBAN. - Appropriate mainly for repetitive manufacturing
environments.
8KANBAN-based Production Systems
Station i
Station i1
A material balance equation (Number of Kanbans)
(Container Size) (Demand at Station i1
over a Cycle Period) (Safety Stock)