2C - Reacting To Quality Problem
2C - Reacting To Quality Problem
Recurrence
Do Nothing
(leave it to the
operator to resolve)
5-Why
Recurrence
Recurrence
Do Nothing ?
5-Why
Occasional or Low Volume Occurrence
When the same problem appears every once in a while, then it can’t be
discounted as a “one time occurrence” and we need to put more effort
into investigating the root cause.
Some examples;
• A few parts are rejected for the same dimensional non-conformance
on some, but not all production lots.
• A very small percentage (<<1%) of pop bottles are underfilled
• Some custom-designed brackets made to order for an airplane
cockpit panel are out of tolerance
Do Nothing Fishbone
8D if Critical
Fishbone Diagram
Problems that have low recurrence rely more on expert opinion
than experimentation.
A widely used tool that relies on
expert opinion more than testing is:
• Ishikawa Diagram
(aka Fishbone or
Cause & Effect Diagram)
Like the Fishbone brainstorming tool, this tool does not require
experiments or a lot of data.
The team simply compares the bad product to good product, to find
clues that might point to a potential cause.
We will practice using this tool later in the course. It can be very useful
as part of a structured problem solving approach as well, so is worth
learning.
Trial & Error (aka Guess & Test)
Trial & Error is NOT a structured problem solving methodology
- But it’s still very useful!
Don’t discount the value of Trial & Error, at least at the beginning of a
problem solving process:
• Quick & Easy – you might get lucky!
• Let’s operators and “experts” try out their ideas
• If a trial fails, you still learn something about the problem
It is natural and reasonable to run some trial and error when a problem
arises. Sometimes it works. The trick is to know when to stop guessing
and start using a more structured approach. One good indicator is
when the next trial is going to be expensive or time-consuming. Spend
the time and effort to do it “right” instead.
Recurrence
Recurrence
8D if Critical
Recurrence Recurrence
5-Why Fishbone
Is/Is Not
8D
Chronic Recurring Problems
From a problem-solver’s perspective, this is the kind of problem we
like. (Don’t tell that to the boss!)
• If the problem appears regularly, we can watch the process and see it
happen
• We can collect a lot of data to compare good and bad parts
• We can run experiments and quickly see if the problem goes away
• When we implement a solution, we can clearly demonstrate it works
Process Change
• 8D
• DMAIC
• Shainin Red X
• Statistical Engineering Algorithm
• Kaizen
• etc
Recurrence Recurrence
Statistical
8D Engineering
Algorithm
Kaizen