Chap 10
Chap 10
Operations Management
William J. Stevenson
8th edition
10-2 Quality Control
CHAPTER
10
Inspection and
Inspection corrective Quality built
before/after action during into the
production production process
Inspection
Figure 10.2
How Much/How Often
Where/When
Inspection Costs
Figure 10.3
Cost
Total Cost
Cost of
inspection
Cost of
passing
defectives
Optimal
Amount of Inspection
10-6 Quality Control
Control Chart
Control Chart
Purpose: to monitor process output to see if
it is random
A time ordered plot representative sample
statistics obtained from an on going process
(e.g. sample means)
Upper and lower control limits define the
range of acceptable variation
10-10 Quality Control
Control Chart
Figure 10.4
Mean
Normal variation
due to chance
LCL
Abnormal variation
due to assignable sources
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Sample number
10-11 Quality Control
Sampling Distribution
Figure 10.5
Sampling
distribution
Process
distribution
Mean
10-15 Quality Control
Normal Distribution
Figure 10.6
Standard deviation
99.74%
10-16 Quality Control
Control Limits
Figure 10.7
Sampling
distribution
Process
distribution
Mean
Lower Upper
control control
limit limit
10-17 Quality Control
(process mean is
shifting upward)
Sampling
Distribution
UCL
UCL
Does not
R-chart
LCL
detect shift
10-19 Quality Control
Sampling
Distribution (process variability is increasing)
UCL
Does not
x-Chart
LCL
reveal increase
UCL
Use of p-Charts
Table 10.3
When observations can be placed into two
categories.
Good or bad
Pass or fail
Operate or don’t operate
When the data consists of multiple samples
of several observations each
10-22 Quality Control
Use of c-Charts
Table 10.3
Use only when the number of occurrences per
unit of measure can be counted; non-
occurrences cannot be counted.
Scratches, chips, dents, or errors per item
Cracks or faults per unit of distance
Breaks or Tears per unit of area
Bacteria or pollutants per unit of volume
Calls, complaints, failures per unit of time
10-23 Quality Control
Process Capability
Tolerances or specifications
Range of acceptable values established by
engineering design or customer requirements
Process variability
Natural variability in a process
Process capability
Process variability relative to specification
10-25 Quality Control
Process Capability
Figure 10.15
Lower Upper
Specification Specification
A. Process variability
matches specifications
Lower Upper
Specification Specification
B. Process variability
Lower Upper
well within specifications Specification Specification
C. Process variability
exceeds specifications
10-26 Quality Control
specification width
Process capability ratio, Cp =
process width
Lower Upper
specification specification
Process
mean
+/- 3 Sigma
+/- 6 Sigma
10-28 Quality Control
Simplify
Standardize
Mistake-proof
Upgrade equipment
Automate
10-29 Quality Control
CHAPTER
10
Additional PowerPoint slides
contributed by
Geoff Willis,
University of Central Oklahoma.
10-31 Quality Control
Process Centering
n
X bar chart X i
X bar is a sample mean X i 1
n
Process Dispersion (consistency)
R chart
R is a sample range R max( X i ) min( X i )
10-33 Quality Control
X bar charts
x / n
X
j 1
j
X
m
UCL X z x LCL X z x
-OR-
UCL X A2 R LCL X A2 R
10-34 Quality Control
R Charts
UCL D4 R LCL D3 R
10-35 Quality Control
Attribute Charts
c charts – used to count defects in a constant
sample size
n
UCL c z c
c
c i 1
centerline LCL c z c
m
10-37 Quality Control
Attribute Charts
n
p charts – used to track a
proportion (fraction) x i
defective pi i 1
n
m
p x
p j 1
ij
centerline
m nm
p (1 p ) p (1 p )
UCL p z LCL p z
n n
10-38 Quality Control
Process Capability
Natural data
spread
Training
MQ4
Job rotation/quality fatigue at Honda
10-40 Quality Control
Quality Measurement
STA10
Monitoring
10-41 Quality Control
Services/Measurement
STAO3
Survey/Efficiency, Admission/Discharge