28 May
2018

How to use OEE in smart manufacturing

The OEE calculation rolls the “6 big losses” of TPM into one number that represents the effective operating rate for a piece of equipment or synchronized line—in other words, the percent of time the equipment or line is operating effectively, or its valuable operating time.

Lean Manufacturing
Comment utiliser l'OEE dans la fabrication intelligente

An article on the Industry Week's website OEE - Learn How to Use It Right clearly explains what is Overall Equipment Effectiveness and how to use it.

"Put simply, OEE assigns numerical value to improvement opportunity. It factors in the availability, performance and quality of output of a given piece of equipment and tells you this:

How much right-first-time product did this machine produce
compared to what it should have produced
in the allocated time?

In other words, is a piece of equipment effective within its value stream? Does it let you meet present or future customer demand? If not (and this is critical), OEE helps you analyze the reasons why so you can address them systematically."

How is OEE calculated

OEE (%) = Availability rate × Performance rate × Quality rate

Availability rate (percentage of time the machine is ready to produce, working properly, and not in the midst of changeovers or adjustments) = Available time (scheduled operating time − downtime) ÷ Scheduled operating time.

Performance rate (ratio of output produced compared to a standard) = Actual output ÷ Standard output.

Quality rate (ratio of good output compared to actual output)= Right-first-time output ÷ Actual output.

How to Use OEE 

The author of the article in Industry Week  highlights 4 key uses:

  1. Use OEE as an improvement metric.
  2. OEE is best used on a single piece of equipment or synchronized line.
  3. There is no absolute that works as an OEE benchmark or target – it’s relative to your situation.
  4. As a Yardstick for measuring improvement

Start Monitoring your OEE today

Worximity now offers new Overall Equipment Effectiveness add-on for Smart Factory Level 3.

Worximity_PC_OEE_alert

SOURCE: http://www.industryweek.com/quality/oee-learn-how-use-it-right

Want to learn more?
Download the ebook
Related blog articles

Articles connexes

Retour au blog
Nous vous remercions ! Votre demande a bien été reçue !
Oups ! Un problème s'est produit lors de l'envoi du formulaire.
23
mai 2024

Exemples de Lean Manufacturing provenant des principaux leaders de l’industrie

French
9
Janvier 2024

Manufacturing Trends to Lookout for in 2024

English
16
Oct. 2023

The Synergy Between Lean Manufacturing and OEE Monitoring

English

Articles connexes

Retour au blog
Nous vous remercions ! Votre demande a bien été reçue !
Oups ! Un problème s'est produit lors de l'envoi du formulaire.
27
Juillet 2018

How Real-time Data Will Impact Your Food Manufacturing Operations

Real-time data (RTD) monitoring is information that's delivered immediately after collection—there is no delay in the timeliness of the information provided and it's often used for navigation or tracking. Learn how how RTD monitoring will impact your food manufacturing operations.

English
13
Juillet 2018

5 Examples of How IIoT is Changing Manufacturing

At Engineering.com, writer Isaac Maw asked in an article published last month, "What’s the Promise of the Connected Factory??" Here are five examples based on Maw's research and conversations with industry experts.

English
12
Juillet 2018

3 Lessons from the 2018 McRock IIoT Symposium

A summary of the 2018 McRock IIoT Symposium in Montreal and three take-away lessons on industry 4.0.

English