ScottBP
17th March 2006, 11:35 AM
The competition among all the commercial calibration labs is turn-around time, and it seems that many principles of lean manufacturing could be applied to a calibration lab to speed up the turn-around time.
The question is, how would you go about applying the principles of lean to a calibration lab? I know most manufacturers have an in-house cal lab or at least an instrument and control (I&C) shop, so I'm pretty sure the Kaizen gurus hit up the cal lab or I&C shop at the same time they're evaluating the rest of the company.
But the lab managers of most 3rd party cal labs have never worked in the manufacturing industry, where lean production control skills are learned and ingrained. I've been told that calibration software is needed to take care of these tasks.
We are looking at utilizing Fluke MET/CAL to speed up our electrical calibrations, because it can automate a lot of electronic calibrations by controlling the calibrators via IEEE-4888 interfaces, and then collecting data from the instruments being tested via communications ports. (We are currently using a manual data collection system.) Automating calibrations makes it mistake-proof, and by automatically flagging typos, incorrect decimal places and out of tolerance readings, the number of QA mistakes are dramatically decreased. Besides that, being computerized, it whacks the paper shuffle off at the knees.
But MET/CAL is geared mainly towards electrical calibrations, and we are a multi-disciplined cal lab. You can't connect gage blocks, torque wrenches, glass thermometers or analog pressure gauges to a computer, so for these things, calibration data would still need to be entered manually. For that, there are numerous other softwares like Blue Mountain's Calibration Manager, IndySoft's Gage Insite, etc., which we are also looking at.
What other things could we look at "leaning out" at a cal lab? Should we start out with a process map that gets all down into the nitty-gritty of every step along the way from the time we receive a piece of equipment from a customer to the time it's back in their hands? Anybody else have experience with leaning out a cal lab?
The question is, how would you go about applying the principles of lean to a calibration lab? I know most manufacturers have an in-house cal lab or at least an instrument and control (I&C) shop, so I'm pretty sure the Kaizen gurus hit up the cal lab or I&C shop at the same time they're evaluating the rest of the company.
But the lab managers of most 3rd party cal labs have never worked in the manufacturing industry, where lean production control skills are learned and ingrained. I've been told that calibration software is needed to take care of these tasks.
We are looking at utilizing Fluke MET/CAL to speed up our electrical calibrations, because it can automate a lot of electronic calibrations by controlling the calibrators via IEEE-4888 interfaces, and then collecting data from the instruments being tested via communications ports. (We are currently using a manual data collection system.) Automating calibrations makes it mistake-proof, and by automatically flagging typos, incorrect decimal places and out of tolerance readings, the number of QA mistakes are dramatically decreased. Besides that, being computerized, it whacks the paper shuffle off at the knees.
But MET/CAL is geared mainly towards electrical calibrations, and we are a multi-disciplined cal lab. You can't connect gage blocks, torque wrenches, glass thermometers or analog pressure gauges to a computer, so for these things, calibration data would still need to be entered manually. For that, there are numerous other softwares like Blue Mountain's Calibration Manager, IndySoft's Gage Insite, etc., which we are also looking at.
What other things could we look at "leaning out" at a cal lab? Should we start out with a process map that gets all down into the nitty-gritty of every step along the way from the time we receive a piece of equipment from a customer to the time it's back in their hands? Anybody else have experience with leaning out a cal lab?



