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by Steven Wachs Leave a Comment

How do I know what product or process characteristics to control?

How do I know what product or process characteristics to control?

While the construction of control charts is relatively straight-forward, often a more difficult question is “how do I know what process characteristic to control in the first place?”  Clearly, controlling “everything” is not feasible or a smart use of limited resources.  

In an earlier topic, we discussed the philosophy of process control as opposed to inspection (or product control).  There we stressed that process control is most beneficial when we move upstream in the process.  When the significant process variables that affect a key process output are being controlled, then the process output is predictable.  Costly (and imperfect) inspection may be eliminated.

So the questions now become:

  • What are the key process output variables?
  • Which process input variables, if controlled, will produce predictable and consistent outputs?

What are the key process output variables?

Key process output variables (sometimes referred to as Key Characteristics) are attributes or features of a material, part, assembly, subsystem, or system whose variation has a significant influence on the fit, performance, reliability, manufacturability, or assembly.  In short, they are characteristics that have a big impact on efficiency and/or customer satisfaction.  Variation in key process output variables leads to lower levels of quality and reliability and ultimately – higher costs.

Examples of some key process output variables are:

  • Slip Torque of an Actuator
  • Gap between car body and rear quarter glass panel
  • Cabin Wind Noise
  • Fill Volume for a bottled beverage

What are the key process input variables?

Key process input variables are process inputs that have a significant impact on the variation found in a Key process output variable.  That is, if the key process input variables were controlled (e.g. held constant), the process would produce predictable and consistent outputs.

For example, if the flatness of the clutch disks has a significant impact on the slip torque of an actuator, then clutch disk flatness would be key process input variable.

As another example, my wife likes to experiment with baking the healthiest cookies possible by substituting fat free yogurt for butter.  Clearly, the absence of butter has a large impact on the consistency and taste of the cookies.  By finding an acceptable butter/yogurt mix and then holding this key process input variable constant, I should expect consistent cookie consistency!

How are key process input variables identified?

Since we have limited resources, the challenge is determining which input variables are important enough to control.  While considerable effort is spent on “trial and error” approaches, these are extremely inefficient and almost never result in optimal solutions.

Fortunately, a tool exists that is perfect for this problem.  Design of Experiments (DOE) is a tool that allows us to conduct structured experimentation to efficiently model process behavior and understand the cause and effect relationships present.  Many types of experiments are available and their appropriate use depends on the experiment objectives, the number of factors to be investigated, the types of factors, etc.

Most products and process must satisfy multiple customer requirements (and so there are multiple key process output variables).  For example, a part may need to posess the required strength and flexibility.  Often, optimizing one performance metric will degrade another.  DOE can be used to jointly optimize systems where multiple objectives are present – that is to find the “sweet spot.”

Rigorous use of DOE is invaluable in determining not only which variables must be controlled to produce consistent outputs – but also to what extent must the input variables be controlled.  That is, we may quantify the sensitivity of the output variable to changes in the input variable.  And this is exactly the information that’s needed to deploy effective control charts.

Filed Under: Articles, Integral Concepts, on Tools & Techniques

About Steven Wachs

Steven Wachs has 25 years of wide-ranging industry experience in both technical and management positions. Steve has worked as a statistician at Ford Motor Company where he has extensive experience in the development of statistical models, reliability analysis, designed experimentation, and statistical process control.

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Articles by Steven Wachs, Integral Concepts
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