Manufacturing Operations: 1 Processing and Assembly Operations
Manufacturing Operations: 1 Processing and Assembly Operations
There are certain basic activities that must be carried out in a factory to convert raw
materials into finished products. Limiting our scope to a plant engaged in making
discrete products, the factory activities are: (1) processing and assembly operations, (2)
material handling, (3) inspection and test, and (4) coordination and control.
The first three activities are the physical activities that “touch” the product as it is
being made. Processing and assembly operations alter the geometry, properties, and/or
appearance of the work unit. They add value to the product. The product must be moved
from one operation to the next in the manufacturing sequence, and it must be inspected
and/or tested to insure high quality. It is sometimes argued that these material handling
and inspection activities not add value to the product. However, our viewpoint is that
value is added through the totality of manufacturing operations performed on the
product. Unnecessary operations, whether they are processing, assembly, material
handling, or inspection, must be eliminated from the sequence of steps performed to
complete a given product.
Manufacturing processes can be divided into two basic types: (1) processing operations
and (2) assembly operations. A processing operation transforms a work material from
one state of completion to a more advanced state that is closer to the final desired part or
product. It adds value by changing the geometry, properties, or appearance of the
starting material. In general, processing operations are performed on discrete workparts,
but some processing operations are also applicable to assembled items, for example,
painting a welded sheet metal car body. An assembly operation joins two or more
components to create a new entity, which is called an assembly, subassembly, or some
other term that refers to the specific joining process.
More than one processing operation are usually required to transform the starting
material into final form. The operations are performed in the particular sequence to
achieve the geometry and/or condition defined by the design specification.
Deformation processes. In most cases, the starting material is a ductile metal that
is shaped by applying stresses that exceed the metal’s yield strength. To increase
ductility, the metal is often heated prior to forming. Deformation processes
include forg ing, extrusion, and rolling.Also included in this category are sheet
metal processes such as drawing, forming, and bending.
Surface processing operations include: (1) cleaning, (2) surface treatments, and
(3) coating and thin film deposition processes. Cleaning includes both chemical and
mechanical processes to remove dirt, oil, and other contaminants from the
surface. Surface treatments include mechanical working, such as shot peening and
sand blasting, and physical processes, like diffusion and ion
implantation. Coating and thin film deposition processes apply a coating of material
to the exterior surface of the workpart. Common coating processes
includeelectroplating, anodizing of aluminum, and organic coating (call it painting).
Thin film deposition processes includephysical vapor deposition and chemical vapor
deposition to form extremely thin coatings of various substances. Several surface
processing operations have been adapted to fabricate semiconductor materials (most
commonly silicon) into integrated circuits for microelectronics. These processes
include chemical vapor deposition, physical vapor deposition, and oxidation. They are
applied to very localized areas on the surface of a thin wafer of silicon (or other
semiconductor material) to create the microscopic circuit.
Other activities that must be performed in the factory include material handling and
storage, inspection and testing, and coordination and control.
Eugene Merchant, an advocate and spokesman for the machine tool industry for
many years, observed that materials in a typical metal machining batch factory or job
shop spend more time waiting or being moved than in processing [3]. His observation
is illustrated in Figure 2.3. About 95% of a part’s time is spent either moving or
waiting (temporary storage). Only 5% of its time is spent on the machine tool. Of this
5%, less than 30% of the time on the machine (1.5% of the total time of the part) is
time during which actual cutting is taking place. The remaining 70% (3.5% of the
total) is required for loading and unloading, part handling and positioning, tool
positioning, gaging, and other elements of nonprocessing time. These time
proportions provide evidence of the significance of material handling and storage in a
typical factory.
Inspection and Test. Inspection and test are quality control activities. The
purpose of inspection is to determine whether the manufactured product meets the
established design standards and specifications. For example, inspection examines
whether the actual dimensions of a mechanical part are within the tolerances indicated
on the engineering drawing for the part. Testing is generally concerned with the
functional specifications of the final product rather than with the individual parts that
go into the product. For example, final testing of the product ensures that it functions
and operates in the manner specified by the product designer. In Part IV of this text,
we examine the inspection and testing function.
Control at the plant level includes effective use of labor, maintenance of the
equipment, moving materials in the factory, controlling inventory, shipping products
of good quality on schedule, and keeping plant operating costs at a minimum possible
level. The manufacturing control function at the plant level represents the major point
of intersection between the physical operations in the factory and the information
processing activities that occur in production.