Rob Nix
13th November 2003, 01:00 PM
I am looking for the name of a particular graph. Perhaps someone can help me. :o
It is where you take a floor plan of the plant and track the movement of a product or a person throughout the day or project, creating a continuous line that meanders through the facility. I may not be explaining this correctly, but maybe it'll get things going.
Thank you!
JRKH
13th November 2003, 01:04 PM
Process Flow diagram
James
db
13th November 2003, 01:19 PM
I am looking for the name of a particular graph. Perhaps someone can help me. :o
It is where you take a floor plan of the plant and track the movement of a product or a person throughout the day or project, creating a continuous line that meanders through the facility. I may not be explaining this correctly, but maybe it'll get things going.
Thank you!
What you might be describing is commonly called a "spaghetti chart". It is where you actually show the path the individual travels as seen from overhead. It is used to show wasted movement and the need for better placement of tools, equipment, materials and testing stuff.
Does that help?
isogirl
13th November 2003, 01:38 PM
I think db's got it...we have one. The lines are different colors and are solid or dotted to show the difference between products, etc.
Atul Khandekar
13th November 2003, 02:05 PM
"String Diagram" ?
Rob Nix
13th November 2003, 02:07 PM
YES! Spaghetti chart! That's what I was looking for. Thanks Dave (and Isogirl). I couldn't remember the name of it, even though I've used it. I am putting together some training materials for Lean Enterprise and ran into this snag. Thanks again. :)
Sue
13th November 2003, 02:07 PM
You can find an example of one here:
*** DEAD LINK REMOVED ***
Sue :bigwave:
Rob Nix
13th November 2003, 02:11 PM
And thank you Sue! I just dropped your pdf example right into my powerpoint presentation (if it is OK with you). I love this site!
Sue
13th November 2003, 02:17 PM
Rob,
Glad it helped, but since it isn't my design, I have no copyright issue with you using it in your PP ;)
Sue
db
13th November 2003, 02:21 PM
You can find an example of one here:
***DEAD LINK REMOVED***
Sue :bigwave:
Actually, Sue, that is pretty clean. I saw one where it had over 150 stops to it. Through lean, it was reduced to 16.
A value stream map shows the waste in the entire system, the spaghetti chart shows waste in movement at the workstation, or local level. Both are good tools.
--------------added -------------------
this goes to show 5.2 in action. I answered the question (met the requirements). Sue came along, and not only answered the question, but provided a useful diagram (met the requirements with the aim of enhancing customer satisfaction). See how this ISO thing works?
Atul Khandekar
13th November 2003, 02:29 PM
I always thought this was called a string diagram - esp. when pins and thread was used. Typically used to solve plant layout issues.
***DEAD LINK REMOVED***
db
13th November 2003, 02:33 PM
I always thought this was called a string diagram - esp. when pins and thread was used.
I won't argue with you, and that could very well be one name for it. It does make sense, especially when you use strings and pins. I've just always know it as a spaghetti chart. This may be similar to the CAED/Fishbone/Ishikawa diagram. It all depends on who you talk to as to what it is called.
Marc
16th December 2004, 05:59 AM
You can find an example of one here:
*** DEAD LINK REMOVED ***
Sue :bigwave:
The link died. Oh, well. Anyone have anything to add?
Sue
16th December 2004, 06:44 AM
Another example can be found at: ***DEAD LINK REMOVED***
Sue
Marc
16th December 2004, 07:21 AM
Is this the same thing?