Takt Time: A Guide to the Very Basic Lean Calculation
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8223865247
- EAN9798223865247
- Date de parution16/10/2020
- Protection num.Adobe DRM
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurDraft2Digital
Résumé
Are you struggling to align production with customer demand?Discover the foundational Lean concept that drives flow, efficiency, and stability: Takt Time. In this practical guide, you'll learn: What takt time is and how it's calculated How Toyota uses it to synchronize production How to apply it in your operations to reduce waste How to adjust takt over time to respond to changes in demand Perfect for: lean practitioners, operations managers, industrial engineers, and continuous improvement professionals.
Written in simple terms with real-world relevance, this book is your starting point for building flow and balancing workloads the Lean way. More about this Book:Takt time is calculated as the amount of manufacturing time that is available divided by the volume of orders. In the 1930s, the German aviation industry employed Takt for the first time as a production management tool. The idea was widely used within Toyota in the 1950s, and by the late 1960s, it had been adopted by the majority of the Toyota supplier base.
Every month, Toyota assesses the takt for a process, with a modifying review occurring every 10 days. Takt time is used to properly balance supply and demand. It gives a lean production system its beating heart.
Written in simple terms with real-world relevance, this book is your starting point for building flow and balancing workloads the Lean way. More about this Book:Takt time is calculated as the amount of manufacturing time that is available divided by the volume of orders. In the 1930s, the German aviation industry employed Takt for the first time as a production management tool. The idea was widely used within Toyota in the 1950s, and by the late 1960s, it had been adopted by the majority of the Toyota supplier base.
Every month, Toyota assesses the takt for a process, with a modifying review occurring every 10 days. Takt time is used to properly balance supply and demand. It gives a lean production system its beating heart.
Are you struggling to align production with customer demand?Discover the foundational Lean concept that drives flow, efficiency, and stability: Takt Time. In this practical guide, you'll learn: What takt time is and how it's calculated How Toyota uses it to synchronize production How to apply it in your operations to reduce waste How to adjust takt over time to respond to changes in demand Perfect for: lean practitioners, operations managers, industrial engineers, and continuous improvement professionals.
Written in simple terms with real-world relevance, this book is your starting point for building flow and balancing workloads the Lean way. More about this Book:Takt time is calculated as the amount of manufacturing time that is available divided by the volume of orders. In the 1930s, the German aviation industry employed Takt for the first time as a production management tool. The idea was widely used within Toyota in the 1950s, and by the late 1960s, it had been adopted by the majority of the Toyota supplier base.
Every month, Toyota assesses the takt for a process, with a modifying review occurring every 10 days. Takt time is used to properly balance supply and demand. It gives a lean production system its beating heart.
Written in simple terms with real-world relevance, this book is your starting point for building flow and balancing workloads the Lean way. More about this Book:Takt time is calculated as the amount of manufacturing time that is available divided by the volume of orders. In the 1930s, the German aviation industry employed Takt for the first time as a production management tool. The idea was widely used within Toyota in the 1950s, and by the late 1960s, it had been adopted by the majority of the Toyota supplier base.
Every month, Toyota assesses the takt for a process, with a modifying review occurring every 10 days. Takt time is used to properly balance supply and demand. It gives a lean production system its beating heart.