IENG301 (Lecture Notes) Set 1
IENG301 (Lecture Notes) Set 1
Adham MACKIEH
IENG-301
Fundamentals of Work Study and Ergonomics
1. Work Study:
Objectives:
1- The elimination of unnecessary work,
2- The design of methods and procedures which are most effective,
3- The design of methods and procedures which require the least
effort,
4- The design of methods and procedures, which are suited to the
person who uses them.
The techniques of Work Study that will be covered in this course are:
1- Method Study,
2- Charting Techniques,
3- Time Study,
4- Work Place Design principles,
5- Job Evaluation and Compensation.
Objective:
Designing for Human Use.
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PRODUCTIVITY
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Definitions:
1- Motion study: Work methods design-for finding the preferred method
of doing work. That is, the ideal method or the one nearest to it.
2- Time study: Work measurement- for determining the standard time to
perform a specific task.
3- Motion and Time Study: The systematic study of work systems with the
purposes of:
1)- developing the preferred system and method, usually the one with
the lowest cost;
2)- standardizing this system and method;
3)- determining the time required by a qualified and properly trained
person working at a normal pace to do a specific task or operation; and
4)- assisting in training the worker in the preferred method.
Certain tools and techniques have evolved over the years to assist in
developing preferred work methods. These are shown in the figure 1, below.
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Human
Operation chart Detailed analysis by factors
Therbligs
Micromotion study
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Standardizing
the operation
Written
standard practice
Standardization
a Methods
B Materials
c Tools and Instruction sheet Motion pictures Videotap
equipment written std practice e
d Working Standard practice
conditions
SIMO chart and
Written std. Practice
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This time standard may be used for planning and scheduling work, for cost
estimating, or for labor cost control, or it may serve as the basis for a wage
incentive plan.
Work
Measurement Stop-Watch Study Micromotion Predetermined Work Sampling
Studies Time System
Recording information
Taking the
study
Dividing operation
into elements
Rating operator
performance
Delay
Determination of time
standard
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The supervisor, the motion and time study analyst, a special instructor, or a
skilled operator may act as the teacher.
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HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
Fredrick W. Taylor,
He is generally conceded to be the founder of modern ‘Time Study.’
However, Time studies were conducted in Europe many years before
Taylor’s time. In 1760, Jean Rodolphe Perronet, a french engineer,
made extensive Time Studies in manufacturing, while 60 years later,
an english economist, Charles W. Babbage, conducted Time Study in
manufacturing.
Taylor began his Time Study work in 1881 at the Midvale Steel
Company in Philadelphia.
Taylor proposed that the work of each employee be planned out by the
Management at least one day in advance. Workers were to receive
complete written instructions describing their tasks in detail and
noting the means to accomplish them. Each job was to have a
Standard Time, determined by Time Studies made by experts.
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After the death of Gilbreth (at the age of 55), Lilian, who had received
a PhD in Psychology and had been a more than equal collaborator,
continued on her own, advancing the concept of work simplification
especially for the physically handicapped.
Carl G. Barth,
Developed a production slide rule for determining the most efficient
combinations of speeds and feeds for cutting metals of various
hardness, considering the depth of cut, size of tool, and life of the tool.
Harrington Emerson,
Applied scientific methods to work on the Santa Fe Railroad and
wrote a book, ‘Twelve Principles of Efficiency,’ in which he made an
effort to inform management of procedures for efficient operation.
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Motion and Time Study received added stimulus during World War II.
Second. The selection of the best worker for each particular task and then
training, teaching, and developing the workman; in place of the former
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practice of allowing the worker to select his own task and train himself as
best he could.
Fourth. The division of the work into almost equal shares between the
management and the workers, each department taking over the work for
which it is the better fitted; instead of the former condition, in which almost
all of the work and the greater part of the responsibility were thrown on the
men.
GILBRETHs were concentrating on finding the very best way for doing
work. They wished to determine the shortest possible time in which the work
would be performed.
They used timing devices of great precision and selected the best operators
obtainable as subjects for their studies.
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If an interrupter is placed in the electric circuit with the bulb, and if the light
is flashed on quickly and off slowly, the path of the bulb will appear as a
dotted line with pear-shaped dots indicating the direction of the motion. The
spots of light will be spaced according to the speed of the movement, being
widely spaced when the operator moves fast and close together when the
movement is slow. From this graph it is possible to measure accurately time,
speed, acceleration, and retardation, and to show direction and the path of
motion in three dimensions. Such a record is called a chronocyclegraph.
From the chronocyclegraph, it is possible to construct accurate wire models
of the motion paths. GILBRETH used these records to aid in improving
methods, to demonstrate correct motions, and to assist in teaching new
operators.
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1. Problem definition
2. Analysis of problem
3. Search for possible solutions
4. Evaluation of alternatives
5. Recommendation for action.
1.Problem definition
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3- Determination of activities that man probably can do best and those that the
machine can do best and man-machine relationships.
4- Re-examination of problems and determination of subproblems.
5- Re-examination of criteria.
Notes:
Evaluation of the facts should not be made during the analysis stage.
Critical judgment should be deferred until later in the problem-solving
process.
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The basic objective of course is to find the preferred solution that will meet
the criteria and the specifications that have been established.
This suggests that several alternative solutions be found and then the
preferred solution can be selected from these.
Note:
It is wise to take a broad and idealistic view in considering possible solutions
to the problem.
4. Evaluation of Alternatives
The recommended solution may be the one that is most likely to be accepted
and put into effect rather than the ideal solution.
In many cases, the person who solves the problem is not the one who will
either use the recommended solution or give final approval for its adoption.
Therefore, after the preferred solution has been found, it must be
communicated to other persons.
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The over-all process of putting a new product into production can be divided
into three parts or phases:
1. Planning.
2. Pre-production.
3. Production.
2. Pre-production
This is the transition phase. The planning information is transferred to the
production organization.
Tools, machines, and equipment are purchased, installed, and tried out.
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The planned operator method is carefully checked against the method being
used, and the actual time taken is checked against the original estimate.
3. Production
It is the continuing operation of the manufacturing activity established in the
planning and pre-production phases.
It involves the use of operators, machines, and materials for the most
effective manufacture of the product.
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The Procter and Gamble Company, established a formal procedure for work
elimination, it is called Cost Elimination. This approach goes as follows:
1)- Select the cost for questioning. It is suggested that a major cost
should be selected first in order to get the greatest money returns. If the
major cost is eliminated, this will often lead to the elimination of many
smaller operations as well. Labor costs, materials costs, clerical costs, and
overhead costs of all kinds are possible subjects for elimination. Efficient
operations can be eliminated just as easily as those not as well done.
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Operations for which there is no basic cause, or for which a basic cause no
longer exists, can be eliminated at once.
3)- Question the basic cause for elimination. If the basic cause has
been identified, then it can be questioned in two ways.
a. Disregard the basic cause and consider what would happen if the
operation were not done. If the same results or better results can be
obtained without the operation, then consideration should be given to
eliminating it at once. However, disregarding the basic cause can be
dangerous. In this connection it is necessary to consider two points:
(1) determine the area of influence of the basic cause and what else
might happen if this basic cause were eliminated? And (2) determine
the associated “price tag” of the basic cause. Is there a proper return
on the money spent to obtain the desired results? If the basic cause
cannot be disregarded, the second opportunity for elimination is b.
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If a single operation is the subject for study, then the operation chart may be
used. The activity chart and the man and machine chart are also useful, and
occasionally it may be worthwhile to make a micro motion analysis of the
job, particularly if the cycle is short and a large number of people are
employed on it.
Note: It should be clearly understood, however, that the process chart, flow
diagram, activity chart, man and machine chart, operation chart, and simo
chart are merely tools to be used as needed.
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