lookmanufacturing.com
  • Home
  • About
  • Industry
  • Automation
  • Processing
  • Contact
    • Write For Us
Home - effectiveness
Tag:

effectiveness

Tim-wood
Injection MoldingProcessing

7 Types of Waste in Injection Molding – “TIMWOOD”

by Chirag December 11, 2017
written by Chirag

As a trainer and consultant in lean manufacturing. I stumbled upon the 7 types of wastes – TIMWOOD. This kindled my curiosity to consider the different sorts of waste inside a typical Injection Molding process and classify them in to these 7 kinds of waste.

7 Types of Waste

Naturally, Injection Molding is really a complex procedure that involves coordination among various departments. There’s great potential for reducing waste in the Molding Process.

1. “T” for Transportation – The unnecessary movement of people or parts between processes.

e.g.

  • Moving molds from storage to the press and vice versa
  • The movement of resin from warehouse to the press
  • The movement of tools and auxiliary device
  • The unnecessary movement of finished goods or semi-finished goods before they are shipped

Address transportation issues by

  • If possible, placing the process nearby, using material that shifts from tactics to process without significant delays
  • Expansion of production route
  • Acquiring multiple storage locations
  • Not creating extended or complicated material handling system

 

2. “I” for Inventory – Holding unnecessary material or parts when not needed

e.g.

  • Extra resin inventory – Stocking more resin than necessary
  • Surplus parts inventory – Producing parts more than necessary
  • Extra machine spare/expendable items/tools

To avoid getting over stock, you can

  • Adjust the development process to achieve smooth flow
  • Work with a small batch size
  • Adhere to the first-in-first-out principle of stagnant material.
  • Reduce switching time

 

3. “M” for Motion – Unnecessary Motion that contributes no value

e.g.

  • Opening and closing the security gates for removing parts from the mold/tool without using sprue robots
  • Manual de-gating and extra secondary operation
  • Reaching too far over for handling parts
  • Walking around for searching tools

Reducing motion waste by

  • Improving workstation layouts to avoid excessive walking or bending
  • Organizing techniques to allow parts to transfer easily from one hand to another
  • Redesigning work layout to reduce change in direction of material
  • Reduction of batch size

 

4. “W” for Waiting – People or parts that wait for a work cycle to be completed

e.g.

  • Waiting for Machine – Barrel heating, mold heating/cooling, hot runner manifold, machine failure, machine maintenance
  • Waiting for Material – Preheating
  • Waiting for Men – Paper making for quality inspection/approval, missing schedule
  • Waiting for Mold – Tool repairing, tool adjustments under out-of-tolerance conditions

The key to eliminating waiting waste is

  • Procedures
  • Following checklists for activities where available
  • Keeping the work area to specified standard

 

5. “O” for Over-processing – Using equipments that are not necessary for the work

e.g.

  • Making parts which are of tighter tolerance than is needed by Customer
  • Over rejecting/over inspecting parts beyond customer needs
  • Using bigger press/greater tonnage press that is needed for that mold
  • Produce parts with more cycle time
  • Running multi-cavity tool with cavities off leading to more cycle time/part produced

Reduce over-processing by:

  • Standardizing best approaches for workers to follow along with
  • Setting obvious specifications and quality acceptance standards

 

6. “O” for Over-production – Generating parts than precisely what it takes

e.g.

  • Producing more parts than customers need
  • Making more parts in anticipation of more orders
  • Making many parts due to schedule problems
  • Running a mold when only one part is required from multiple cavities

Avoid over-production by:

  • Dealing with smaller sized batch sizes
  • Making more reliable processes
  • Creating stable schedules
  • Balancing cells or departments
  • Using accurate forecast information which reflects the particular demand

 

7. “D” for Defects – Rework, Scrap, Incorrect documentation

e.g.

  • Making wrong parts – wrong specifications/color/wrong Rev
  • Wrong set up – secondary operations
  • Parts with missing documents/documents with errors
  • Packaging parts with incorrect/wrong box labels
  • Mixing two various parts while shipping

To reduce the regularity of defects, attempt to

  • Institute sufficient training to enhance workers’ skills
  • Improve processes
  • Source capable suppliers
  • Reduce operator error
  • Lower the surplus stock
  • Improve transportation plans

 

There’s also another kind of waste – Skills wastage which is recognized as the eighth kind of waste

e.g.

  • Allowing untrained/under-trained Labor or Operator to function specialized equipment
  • Insufficient specialized training sources for that molding operations personnel
  • Underutilizing human sources for doing rudimentary tasks

 

Identifying these kinds of wastes and classifying them in to the 7/8 kinds of waste could be useful in creating a Lean Molding Shop. As more shops around the world adjust to Lean culture, this exercise could be interesting for that Injection Molding Business.

December 11, 2017 0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

About This Site

Lookmanufacturing.com is a manufacturing blog that providing the latest manufacturing news for engineer. such as rapid prototyping, injection molding, 3D printing, PCB fabrication and automotive manufacturing.

 

 

Contact Us

If you have any suggestion or want to submit article to us, please fill this form

Copyright All rights reserved.


Back To Top
lookmanufacturing.com
  • Home
  • About
  • Industry
  • Automation
  • Processing
  • Contact
    • Write For Us