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  When is formal CA necessary?

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Author Topic:   When is formal CA necessary?
barb butrym
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posted 18 July 1998 04:49 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for barb butrym   Click Here to Email barb butrym     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
When do you draw the line and say..OK now you've done it....I want FORMAL corrective action and I want it effective?

With industry running lean and mean, a formal CA/PA program is harder and harder to enforce (re: resourses). What are some effective 'non formal' CA/PA programs that have been successful?

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Marc Smith
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posted 19 July 1998 08:28 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Marc Smith   Click Here to Email Marc Smith     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I see this as an issue of a
Nonconformance / Corrective Action / Preventative Action
system. They are intimately intertwined. IMHO 4.13 and 4.14 should be one issue. I see the current division as pretty 'stoopid' - division of a system into elements. That said, on with the show.

When do you do a Corrective Action in response to a Nonconformance? How far do you go?

First, lets start with a little something just to get our juices flowing on this topic. Visit the following thread from the old forum:

Preventive Action vs Registrar's Definition

OK. Are we appropriately hyped and ready to go? Grab your Mountain Dew or other highly caffinated beverage and let's dig in. this could take some time. Onwards, my friends!

I guess I look at this a bit differently than you do barb (Barb?). I look for a system where there is a cascade (if you will) where the nonconformance system allows for review(s) and decisions based upon knowledge and understanding of the problem as it relates to the business as a whole.

This link is to a pdf file. It is a printout of a blank record from a database I wrote about 5 or 6 years ago for a company. I think it may serve to show what I mean by a cascade.

Blank Record from a NC/CA/PA Database

The problem is there is, and can be, no precise black & white line. There is a point where some decisions are simply a matter of 'opinion' - which goes back to my 'infamous' "Can You Explain?". For a given specific incident you might say you would ask for a formal CA/PA where I might not see that need.

You say "With industry running lean and mean, a formal CA/PA program is harder and harder to enforce (re: resourses)."

I don't accept that as relevant other than as an excuse. If someone can show me that the only realistic solution for a problem is to spend US$250,000 for new equipment when they are a small shop and their product is extruded plastic parts for a non-critical assembly (maybe eliminating flash from a wheelbarrow body) I accept that. I'd expect a problematic, but acceptable solution such as humans trimming the flash to a reasonable (however you want to define 'reasonable'...) 'degree' where some flash would get through but is 'tolerable' - it's an issue of visual appearance and not a critical issue such as a functional problem. Contrast this to say airbag igniters where there is a critical sleeve OD which, in large part, controls 'back flash' from the charge, I would expect the company to go farther. Possibly new molds. Possibly a material change. Possibly a new press. Possibly a combination. Probably a PokeYoke preventive action - whatever it takes due to the nature of the criticality of the dimension (the OD of the sleeve) and the nature of the possible effects of an out-of-dimension condition (where we get into FMEA and Control Plan issues including revision).

But back to your question. I'm not sure what you mean by 'non formal'. Do you mean not reported in any way? What is your definition of Formal?

I see the typical failure mode in NC/CA/PA systems as the link at Management Review and in other (depending upon company size - which should be considered throughout any discussion of NC/CA/PA systems) relevant meetings.

You say "...harder to enforce (re: resourses)". I say hogwash. Upper management has the option to enfore the system - or they can ignore it. BUT - I believe (IMHO) that if the system breaks down it's the fault of upper management.

I worked with one company where folks were supposed to wear certain clothing. As I walked through the plant it was obvious people were not complying to the company requirement. I spoke with the plant manager (whom was on the floor quite often) who told me he had never thought about it. He said he was well aware of the requirement but saw that as a middle and lower management issue. Yet - he never brought it up with them until after the audit pointed it out. I guess he figured 'some day' the folks below him would handle it. My very pointed question to him was was, "If you knew it was happening and you did nothing, what else is happening that you do not address?"

Moral of Story: If upper management is not involved any system can easily fail.

Bottom line: A solid NC/CA/PA system with management involvement and strong consideration during management reviews will keep Continuous Improvement going - BUT - there is no line where you can always say this needs a formal CA and this doesn't. In addition to lots of other factors, criteria can change weekly, monthly and (definitely) yearly.

Phew.. Did I confuse things here?

Some good reference threads:

Corrective Action - Closing the Loop

Corrective Actions

Preventive Action

Need for Corrective Action

Confirming Corrective Action Effectiveness

8-D Analysis

Effectiveness of Corrective/Preventative Actions

8-D Forms

FMEA RPNs

[This message has been edited by Marc Smith.]

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barb butrym
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posted 20 July 1998 07:19 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for barb butrym   Click Here to Email barb butrym     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Marc, I was speculating..had nothing in particular in mind, just general conversation.
By formal I was thinking of a detailed data base and the whole nine yards...by informal I was thinking of a short handy dandy unsophisticated way to capture it on the fly.

What I find so often, especially lately as the 'downsized' clients are growing back to size, the resourses are not there YET to capture all the data that is so nice to have.

For example 1 electronics company...their NC report has a place for CA, and that is working well for them. there is a tie from audits and that works well, BUT out there in the process world...they still have small grumblings of issues (not NC product) that reoccur....notices, reinforcement, retraining etc..and still some pop up again..and again...the CA isn't doing well there. Its not highly visible, just aggravating....really grates on me. They seem like small issues to anyone who is not on the receiving end, but I can't get them to do the formal CA thing, as they don't want to be seen as uncooperative or petty. I agree that the depart-manager is the reason behind that, he treats all formal CA as an invasion of his space, then reluctantly does what is needed...but his attitude is felt quite clearly in his department. As a result, since he signs the performance reviews, the workforce mirrors his feelings and does not use the CA/PA system to their advantage. It is historic, has been like that for the 20 years I have been associated with them. So I am always looking for a new approach to win them over.

They do PA well, real well....BUT don't document it well....so it looks like they do very little. I am working that with them, and it is slowly coming to fruit.

That said, what new innovative approaches are working for others out there, that use positive instead of negative vibes, and don't take alot of time to implement?

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dhillsburg
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posted 21 July 1998 04:23 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for dhillsburg   Click Here to Email dhillsburg     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Unfortunately, until the department manager sees the value of a ca/pa system, no system will work for you. Why don't you ask him to accompany you on the next audit your registrar performs...or make sure the auditors visit his area. That way, not only will he be on the hotseat to see firsthand how important it is to follow a system come audit time, you might just get the official finding you need from your registrar to put some weight behind solving the issue once and for all.

No one has time to dream up systems that work in a vacume around difficult people. The sooner you have team cooperation, the better whatever system you choose to implement will work. A so-so system can accomplish quite a bit in an outstanding team environment. The best system around will never work in a non-cooperative one.
-Diane

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George Trybulski
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posted 29 July 1998 10:28 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for George Trybulski   Click Here to Email George Trybulski     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Well, you got me now, now what to do with me. Nonconformance to Corrective Action ? When do you need to impliment Corective Action ? When an operator breaks a tap off on a part, when they drop a part and damage it, when the part comes loose in a vise. Corrective action answers: Don't tap any more parts, don't handle parts ever again, tighten the snot out of the vise. Will retraining solve the problem, and as to "is it effective" should I stand around to see if the operator is going to break another tap ? Do you need Corrective action every time someone "breaks a fingernail ? ENOUGH RAMBLING !!!!!! All nonconformities are important for it gives us data to develop trends which feeds Paredo analysis, and that is what should be your basis for Corrective action, the culimination of the trivial many to establish what your core problems really are. You would be chasing your tail if you take every one individually. The real task is when to ask yourself,"when or when not to impliment Corrective action to a singular problem". What is the "cut off point". I'm still trying to tackle that one myself for it is difficult to set a "standard" on when and when not to. Any feedback to these comments would be incouraged. Happy ISOing !

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Marc Smith
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posted 01 August 1998 02:18 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Marc Smith   Click Here to Email Marc Smith     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Like I said above, each 'incident' is different and as you travel through your system there should be points where decisions are made about continuing or ending the response to the incident.

With data systems as they are now, it is easy to track even the most minor of incidents. Many companies do. With a database, reports are important - but just as important is the question of what to trend. Ford's QOS is an interesting system to look at.

Do you report every broken finger nail? Maybe - depends upon how good you are and what a broken finger nail means to your product and processes. A broken finger nail in the right circumstance could be a serious contamination problem!

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