Measuring Manufacturing Performance Possible With Primary Standards From Optimation


by Thomas Cutler - Date: 2008-07-25 - Word Count: 409 Share This!

Optimation has introduced Primary Standards™ which greatly reduces the cost of measuring manufacturing performance. According to Michael D. Lundy, P.E., President & CEO of Optimation, "Nearly all businesses make measurements and these measurements are intended to tell management about the performance and health of the business.  Often these measurements are secondary standards such as square feet produced, tons shipped, contracts signed, units shipped and many others. Managers use these measurements with a false sense                                      of security that they are actually managing the company well."

Primary Standards enables a manufacturer to know how each part produced contributes to the profitability of the company avoiding secondary standards that mislead and cause wrong decisions. 

 

The reason for this confusion is that the measurement in question was not designed to reflect the profitability of the company. As an example, consider pieces-per-hour as a measurement. Pieces-per-hour is a rate measurement designed to measure efficiency of a machine or group of machines. There are many reasons why an increase in pieces-per-hour may not cause an increase in profit. The first is the sales price and therefore contribution may be lower for the product mix produced during the month. Another is that raw material may cost more. In addition, there are a number of costs that have nothing to do with productivity that may be out of control during the month.

For thirty years OptimationÂ(r) (www.optimation.com) has been the world leader in Part Nesting for Optimized Material and Labor utilization. Consistently providing product advancement leadership to industry, the company's new Nesting Technology, AxiomVE make previous nesting methods obsolete.   The new technology, Vision Emulationâ„¢, allows the system to "see" the shape of parts, just as human eyes would view them.  When a person looks at a part, they see the whole shape and any special features on the part.  This information is then used to determine if the part will fit in an area of the nest.  Vision Emulation eliminates excessive trial and error as well as excessive rotation.

Optimation offers benchmarking against any other method of part nesting; recent benchmarks have show improvements up to 15% in material efficiency alone.  As lean efficiencies are essential, the most advanced nesting technology guarantees the most important parts are always nested in the next available machine, providing advanced information to integrated costing, labor reporting, and material inventory systems. Because Optimation is strong financially and has the most advanced technology; the company offers direct financing from its own capital resources.

 

Optimation

www.optimation.com

Michael D Lundy P.E.

Opti1@optinest.com

877-827-2100


Related Tags: metalworking, fabrication, plasma cutting, material efficiency, oxy-fuel cutting, composite cutting, optimized material efficiency

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