Title: Welcome to our Presentation
1Welcome to our Presentation
- Total Productive Maintenance (TPM)
- Presented by
- Rashmita Tripathy
- Kristen Hammel
2CONTENTS OF TPM
- Introduction
- Why TPM?
- History of TPM
- Similarities and differences between TQM and TPM
- Types of maintenance
- Steps in introduction of TPM in an organization
- Pillars of TPM
- Goals of TPM
- TPM targets
- Example of OEE Calculation
- Benefits of implementing a TPM system
- Difficulties faced in TPM implementation
- Conclusion
- Reference list
3INTRODUCTION TO TPM
- TPM is keeping the plant and equipment at its
highest level through cooperation of all areas of
the organization. - The first part of TPM involves breaking down the
barriers between maintenance and production
personnel so they are working together. - A common objective of TPM is peak performance or
total productivity.
4TPM ?
- Total Productive Maintenance can be considered
the medical science of machines - The idea behind TPM is to markedly increase
production while at the same time increasing
employee morale and job satisfaction. - TPM brings maintenance into focus as a necessary
and vitally important part of the business. - Down time for maintenance is scheduled as a part
of the manufacturing day and, in some cases, as
integral part of the manufacturing process. - The goal is to hold emergency and unscheduled
maintenance to a minimum.
5Why TPM ?
- Avoid wastage in a quickly changing economic
environment. - Producing goods without reducing product quality.
- Reduce cost.
- Produce a low batch quantity at the earliest
possible time. - Goods sent to the customers must be
non-defective.
6History of TPM
- TPM is a innovative Japanese concept, and the
origin of TPM can be traced back to 1951, when
preventive maintenance was introduced in Japan. - However the concept of preventive maintenance was
taken from the United States. - Nippondenso was the 1st company to introduce
plant wide preventive maintenance in 1960.
7History of TPM
- Preventive maintenance is the concept wherein
operators produced goods using machines and the
main group was dedicated with work of maintaining
those machines. - However maintenance became a problem as more
personnel were required, so management decided
that the routine maintenance of equipment would
be carried out by the operators (this is
autonomous maintenance, which is one of the
features of TPM). - Nippondenso which already followed preventive
maintenance also added Autonomous maintenance
done by production operators. - This lead to maintenance prevention, thus
preventive maintenance along with maintenance
prevention and maintainability improvement gave
birth to Productive Maintenance.
8Similarities Differences between TQM TPM
- The TPM program closely resembles the popular TQM
program. Many of the tools such as employee
empowerment, benchmarking, documentation, etc.
used in TQM are used to implement and optimize
TPM.
9Similarities
- Total commitment to the program by upper level
management is required in both programs. - Employees must be empowered to initiate
corrective action. - A long range outlook must be accepted as TPM may
take a year or more to implement and is an
on-going process. Changes in employee mind-set
toward their job responsibilities must take place
as well.
10Differences
- TQMs objective is Quality (Output and effects)
and TPMs objective is Equipment (Input and
cause). - TQM obtains goals by systematizing the management
and it is software oriented and TPM obtains goals
by employee participation and it is hardware
oriented. - TQMs target is quality for PPM and TPMs target
is elimination of losses and wastes.
11Types of Maintenance
- Breakdown maintenance it means that people wait
until equipment fails and repair it. Such a thing
could be used when the equipment failure does not
significantly affect the operation or production
or generate any significant loss other than
repair cost. - Preventive maintenance It is a daily maintenance
( cleaning, inspection, oiling and re-tightening
), design to retain the healthy condition of
equipment and prevent failure through the
prevention of deterioration, periodic inspection
or equipment condition diagnosis, to measure
deterioration. It is further divided into
periodic maintenance and predictive maintenance.
Just like human life is extended by preventive
medicine, the equipment service life can be
prolonged by doing preventive maintenance.
12Types of Maintenance
- Periodic maintenance Time based maintenance
consists of periodically inspecting, servicing
and cleaning equipment and replacing parts to
prevent sudden failure and process problems. - Predictive maintenance This is a method in which
the service life of important part is predicted
based on inspection or diagnosis, in order to use
the parts to the limit of their service life.
Compared to periodic maintenance, predictive
maintenance is condition based maintenance. It
manages trend values, by measuring and analyzing
data about deterioration and employs a
surveillance system, designed to monitor
conditions through an on-line system.
13Types of Maintenance
- Corrective maintenance It improves equipment and
its components so that preventive maintenance can
be carried out reliably. Equipment with design
weakness must be redesigned to improve
reliability or improving maintainability. - Maintenance prevention It indicates the design
of a new equipment. Weakness of current machines
are sufficiently studied ( on site information
leading to failure prevention, easier maintenance
and prevents of defects, safety and ease of
manufacturing ) and are incorporated before
commissioning a new equipment.
14Steps in introduction of TPM in a organization
Preparatory Stage (Step A)
- Step 1 Announcement by Management to all about
TPM introduction in the organization. Proper
understanding, commitment and active involvement
of the top management in needed for this step.
Senior management should have awareness programs,
after which announcement is made to all. Publish
it in the house magazine and put it in the notice
board. Send a letter to all concerned individuals
if required. - Step 2 Initial education and propaganda for TPM.
Training is to be done based on the need. Some
need intensive training and some just an
awareness. Take people who matters to places
where TPM already successfully implemented.
15Step A - Preparatory Stage
- Step 3 Setting up TPM and departmental
committees. TPM includes improvement, autonomous
maintenance, quality maintenance etc., as part of
it. When committees are set up it should take
care of all those needs. - Step 4 Establishing the TPM working system and
target. Now each area is benchmarked and fix up a
target for achievement. - Step 5 A master plan for institutionalizing.
Next step is implementation leading to
institutionalizing wherein TPM becomes an
organizational culture. Achieving PM award is the
proof of reaching a satisfactory level.
16Step B Introduction Stage
- This is a ceremony and we should invite all.
Suppliers as they should know that we want
quality supply from them. Related companies and
affiliated companies who can be our customers,
sisters concerns etc. Some may learn from us and
some can help us and customers will get the
communication from us that we care for quality
output.
17 18STEP C IMPLEMENTATION STAGE
- In this stage 8 pillars of TPM activity are
carried out. - Establish the system for production
efficiency. - Improve administrative efficiency.
- Control safety, sanitation in working
environment.
19PILLARS OF TPM
20PILLAR 1 5S
- TPM starts with 5S.
- Sorting, Systematize, Shining, Standardize, Self
- Discipline. - Problems cannot be seen when workplace is
unorganized. - Cleans and organizes the workplace.
- Makes problems visible.
21- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vtUtc3x3xDFcfeature
related - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzhnnl8jLTb0NR1
22PILLAR 2 AUTONOMOUS MAINTENANCE
- Geared towards developing operators for small
maintenance tasks. - Frees up more skilled workers to focus on more
valuable activity and technical repairs. - Maintenance of equipment by operators to prevent
deterioration.
23PILLAR 3 Kaizen (Kaichange Zengood)
- Principle very large number of small
improvements are more effective in an
organizational environment than a few
improvements of large value. - Systematically reduces losses and inefficiencies
in the workplace. - Can also be applied in production and
administrative areas. - Requires no or little investment.
24PILLAR 4 PLANNED MAINTENANCE
- Aimed to have trouble free machines and
equipments. - Produces defect free products for total customer
satisfaction. - Achieves and maintains availability and
reliability of machines. - Reduces inventory.
25PILLAR 5 QUALITY MAINTENANCE
- Highest quality through defect-free
manufacturing. - Focus is on quality control eliminate current
quality concerns, then move to potential quality
concerns. - Maintains perfect equipment to have perfect
quality of products.
26PILLAR 6 TRAINING
- Aimed to have multi-skilled employees who perform
all functions effectively and independently. - Know-How can be learned through experience and
how to overcome a problem. - For Know-Why education given to operators to
know the root cause of the problem. - Increases productivity.
27PILLAR 7 OFFICE TPM
- Includes analyzing processes and procedures
towards increased office automation. - Must be followed to improve productivity and
efficiency in the administrative functions. - Identifies and eliminates losses.
- Involves all parties towards TPM which improves
processes.
28PILLAR 8 SAFETY, HEALTH ENVIRONMENT
- Target zero accident, zero health damage, zero
fires. - Focus is to create a safe workplace and protect
the environment - Usually a committee is created for this which
includes officers as well as workers.
29GOALS OF TPM
- Zero breakdowns, zero accidents, and zero defects
performance, safety, and quality. - Promote TPM through motivational management.
- Maintains and improves equipment capacity.
- Maintains equipment for life.
- Uses support from all areas of the operation.
- Encourages input from all employees.
- Uses teams for continuous improvement.
- Increases employee morale and job satisfaction.
- Holds emergency and unscheduled maintenance to a
minimum.
30TPM TARGETS
- P
- Obtain Minimum 80 OPE.
- Obtain Minimum 90 OEE.
- Run the machines even during launch.
- Q
- Operate in a manner, so that there are no
customer complaints. - C
- Reduce the manufacturing cost by 30.
- D
- Achieve 100 success in delivering the goods
as required by the customer. - S
- Maintain an accident free environment.
- M
- Increase the suggestions by 3 times. Develop
multi-skilled and flexible workers.
31Overall Plant Efficiency (OPE)
- Function of 3 factors
- - Management losses (losses due to want of
tools, raw materials, men etc) - - Scheduled downtime (preventive maintenance
activity, meetings etc) - - Overall Equipment Efficiency (measures both
effectiveness and efficiency of the equipment).
32Overall Equipment Efficiency (OEE)
- Incorporates 3 basic indicators of equipment
performance and reliability. - Availability (tool change, tool service) (A)
- Performance efficiency (in terms of capacity) (E)
- Rate of quality output (Q).
- Thus, OEE is measured as the product of the
decimal equivalent of the three previous metrics
using the equation - OEE A X E X Q
336 major losses measured by TPM
- Downtime Losses
- 1. Planned
- a. Start-ups
- b. Shift changes
- c. Coffee and launch breaks
- d. Planned maintenance shutdowns
- 2. Un planned Downtime
- a. Equipment breakdown
- b. Changeovers
- c. Lack of material
- Reduced Speed Losses
- 3. Idling and minor stoppages
- 4. Slow-downs
- Poor Quality Losses
- 5. Process nonconformities
- 6. Scrap
34OEE Model
35Availability
- Availability is proportion of time machine which
is actually available out of time it should be
available. - Downtime losses are measured by equipment
availability using the equation - A (T/P) X 100
- Where A availability
- T operating time (P-D)
- P planned operating time
- D downtime
36Performance Efficiency
- The second category of OEE is performance.
- Reduced speed losses are measured by tracking
performance efficiency using the equation - E ((C X N) / T) X 100
- Where E performance efficiency
- C theoretical cycle time
- N processed amount (quantity)
37Rate of Quality Product
- It is third category of OEE.
- It is percentage of good parts out of total
produced. - Poor quality losses are measured by tracking the
rate of quality products produced using the
equation - R ((N - Q) / N) X 100
- Where R rate of quality products
- N processed amount (quantity)
- Q nonconformities
38Example of OEE Calculation
- Last weeks production numbers on machining
center JL58 were as follows - Scheduled operation 10 hours/day 5 days/week
- Manufacturing downtime due to meetings, material
outages, training, breaks, and so forth 410
minutes/week - Maintenance downtime scheduled and equipment
breakdown 227 minutes/week - Theoretical (standard) cycle time 0.5
minutes/unit - Production for the week 4450 units
- Defective parts made 15 units
39 OEE Calculation Contd.
- P 10 hours/day X 5 days/week X 60 minutes/hour
3000 minutes/week - D 410 minutes/week 227 minutes/week 637
minutes/week - T (P-D) 3000 637 2363 minutes
- A (T / P) X 100 (2363 / 3000) X 100 78.8
- E ((C X N) / T) X 100 ((0.5 X 4450) / 2363) X
100 94.2 - R ((N - Q) / N) X 100 ((4450 - 15) / 4450) X
100 99.7 - EE A X E X R 0.788 X 0.942 X 0.997 0.740 or
74.0
40DIRECT BENEFITS OF TPM
- Increases productivity and OPE (Overall Plant
Efficiency) by 1.5 or 2 times. - Rectifies customer complaints.
- Reduces the manufacturing cost by 30.
- Satisfies the customer needs by 100 (Delivering
the right quantity at the right time, in the
required quality). - Reduces accidents.
- Follows pollution control measures.
41INDIRECT BENEFITS OF TPM
- Higher confidence level among the employees.
- Keeps the work place clean, neat, and attractive.
- Favorable change in the attitude of the
operators. - Achieves goals by working as team.
- Shares knowledge and experience.
- The workers get a feeling of owning the machine.
42DIFFICULTIES FACED IN TPM IMPLEMENTATION
- Typically people show strong resistance to
change. - Many people treat it just another Program of the
month without paying any focus and also doubt
about the effectiveness. - Not sufficient resources ( people, money, time,
etc.) and assistance provided. - Insufficient understanding of the methodology and
philosophy by middle management. - TPM is not a quick fix approach, it involves
cultural change to the ways we do things. - Departmental barrier existing within Business
Unit. - Many people considered TPM activities as
additional work/threat.
43CONCLUSION
- TPM may be the only thing that stands between
success and total failure for some companies. - It has been proven to be a program that works.
- It can be adopted to work not only in industrial
plants, but in construction, building
maintenance, transportation, and in a variety of
other situations. - TPM is not merely a concept but a practical and
down-to-earth technique for achieving significant
savings and increase in profits.
44Reference List
- http//www.reliabilityweb.com/art05/tpm.htm
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_Productive_Main
tenance - http//www.siliconfareast.com/tpm.htm
- http//www.epa.gov/lean/thinking/tpm.htm
- http//www.plant-maintenance.com/articles/tpm_intr
o.shtml