Introduction To TPM
Introduction To TPM
Total productive maintenance (TPM) originated in Japan in 1971 as a method for improved machine availability through better utilization of maintenance and production resources. Whereas in most production settings the operator is not viewed as a member of the maintenance team, in TPM the machine operator is trained to perform many of the dayto-day tasks of simple maintenance and fault-finding. Teams are created that include a technical expert (often an engineer or maintenance technician) as well as operators. In this setting the operators are enabled to understand the machinery and identify potential problems, righting them before they can impact production and by so doing, decrease downtime and reduce costs of production. Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) is a well-defined and time-tested concept for maintaining plants and equipment. TPM can be considered the science of machinery health. TPM was introduced to achieve the following objectives: Avoid waste in a quickly changing economic environment. Produce goods without reducing product quality. Reduce costs. Produce a low batch quantity at the earliest possible time. Send only non-defective parts to the customers.
The major difference between TPM and other concepts is that the Production Operators are directly involved in the process of maintaining their equipment. The old notion of "I operate the equipment, You Maintain it" is NOT followed.
A typical TPM implementation requires company-wide participation and full results can only be seen after 3 years and sometimes 5 years. The main reason for this long duration is due to the basic involvement and training required for Autonomous Maintenance participation where operators participate in the restoring the equipment to its original capability and condition and then improving the equipment.
The Pillars & their details a) Efficient Equipment Utilization b) Efficient Worker Utilization c) Efficient Material & Energy Utilization
1. Focused improvement (Kobetsu Kaizen) - Continuously even small steps of improvement. 2. Planned Maintenance - It focuses on Increasing Availability of Equipments & reducing Breakdown of Machines. 3. Initial Control - To establish the system to launch the production of new product & new equipment in a minimum run up time. 4. Education & Training - Formation of Autonomous workers who have skill & technique for autonomous maintenance. 5. Autonomous Maintenance (Jishu Hozen) - It means "Maintaining one's equipment by oneself". There are 7 Steps in & Activities of Jishu Hozen.
6. Quality Maintenance (Hinshitsu Hozen) - Quality Maintenance is establishment of machine conditions that will not allow the occurrence of defects & control of such conditions is required to sustain Zero Defect. 7. Office TPM - To make an efficient working office that eliminate losses. 8. Safety, Hygiene & Environment - The main role of SHE (Safety, Hygiene & Environment) is to create Safe & healthy work place where accidents do not occur, uncover & improve hazardous areas & do activities that preserve environment. Other Pillars Like: Tools Management - To increase the availability of Equipment by reducing Tool Resetting Time, to reduce Tool Consumption Cost & to increase the tool life.
The benefits of TPM are: A Safer Workplace Associate Empowerment An Easier Workload Increased Production Fewer Defects Fewer Breakdowns Fewer Short Stoppages Decreased Costs Decreased Waste
Then Feasibility study results are presented. Both management and the union should be present in the presentation. The presentation should propose an installation strategy and identify a pilot installation. Step 6- Pilot installation: A TPM pilot installation should cover between 10 and 25 percent of plant equipment, not just a few selected machines. There should be a minimum of 6 TPM teams to insure survivability of the installation. Areas appropriate for pilot installations are: where major improvement is needed (too many breakdowns, delays, or idle time, or low capacity or productivity) and where quick success is likely. A good feasibility study is required for all pilot areas. All employees in the pilot areas must receive TPM training. Clear goals and deadlines must be established and team meetings must be held on schedule. Step 7- Plant-wide installation: TPM coordinators of most companies wait too long before expanding the TPM installation over the whole plant. There is no need to wait for final results of the pilot installation. A good and well thought out staggered expansion plan is important, as is a detailed installation plan for each additional area. Expansion initiatives should begin every 3 months (6 months maximum) using the same priorities and decision criteria as for pilots. Step 8- Introduction audit: According to Hartmann (2000), to ensure good progress and a proper and successful installation, audits have proven to be very valuable. The audit is fairly simple and checks if the TPM fundamentals are done correctly (teamwork, organization, tasks, PM development, etc.) and whether the program is on schedule. They are typically carried out 6-12 month after launch by internal or external specialists. Step 9- Progress audit: It is usually the last step before the certification. This audit will point out existing deficiencies (and opportunities) to bring TPM to a successful conclusion. The theoretical part of the audit will be done in the office with the team going over a lot of data followed by a practical part out in the plant around the equipment. The progress audit comes 18-30 month after launch to determine if and how: Preventive maintenance is carried out by the TPM teams. Equipment improvement activities have been executed according to schedules. Increase in OEE has been reached.
1. Management improvement participation (leadership) 2. Organizational infrastructure. 3. Craft and culture of collaboration and co operation. 4. Linking TPM to business strategy & Linking TPM to Quality. 5. Project prioritization and selection Employee Training& Understanding of TPM methodology. 6. Linking TPM to Customers & employees & to create empowerment and authority at all levels. 7. Spreading of TPM in production, R & D, Design, Marketing, and all Depts. of industries.