Available data
Everyone involved agreed that the line operators should make the measurements, and after training in the new technique, they started collecting data. Every 30 minutes three sets of pieces (right and left after cutting) were selected immediately after the cutting operation and the distance from the center mark was measured. These data appear in the table, “Data for Cutting Accuracy of Airplane Components.”
Answers to July Brain Teaser
In her capacity as process engineer for supplier components, Julie tells suppliers about all issues with their components during production. A recent complaint from production is that the hole diameters on a specific component are too small. This occurs in about 450 of the 20,000 pieces used each month. Her first action is to send the pieces with holes that are too small back to the supplier. Next she decided to collect data on the hole diameter to support the complaints.
Q: Based on the data collected by the assembly engineers, what is the process behavior of the hole diameter?A: The hole diameter is predictable with an average of 0.24707 and a standard deviation of 0.00109. See the average and range chart, “Diameter of Hole A.”
Q: What is the capability of the diameter of the hole for this component?A: The capability of the diameter of the hole for this component is Cp = 1.53 and Cpk = 0.63. See the chart, “Capability Analysis for Hole A Diameter.”
Q: Is the current behavior consistent with the complaints from assembly and the presence of an average of 450 pieces per month with holes that have diameters too small?A: The capability analysis reveals that the process average is 1.9 standard deviations from the lower specification which leads to the Cpk of 0.63. Without any reference to a specific distribution, the empirical rule suggests that 90% to 98% of all data will fall between ±2 standard deviations from the average of a set of data. This means that somewhere between 2% and 10% of all data will fall outside this range with approximately one-half on the low side and the rest on the high side. Thus, it can be expected that between 1% and 5% of all data values in a predictable process will fall more than two standard deviations below the average.
If the PPM is truly 22,500, then we would expect on average that one piece in the set of 44 used for the analysis of process behavior to be outside the lower specification. There are four pieces with diameters that are exactly equal to the lower specification. These results are consistent with the complaints from assembly.
Q: What actions should Julie take with the supplier to improve the problem with holes that are too small?A: A combination of the pieces with holes too small and the analysis of the data collected in assembly should be presented to the appropriate representatives from the supplier company. Because the analysis of process behavior shows a predictable process with a Cp of 1.53, all the supplier has to do is involve production and engineering and get them to agree on how to increase the average diameter for this hole. The variation is small enough that an increase in the average diameter should be the solution to the issue of holes too small.