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2 Noise Factors
The input parameters that affect the quality of the product or process may be
classifi ed as design parameters and disturbance factors. The former are parameters
that can be specifi ed freely by the designer. It is the designers responsibility to
select the optimum levels of the design parameters. Disturbance factors are the
parameters that are either inherently uncontrollable or impractical to control.
Taguchi uses the term noise factors to refer to those parameters that are either
too diffi cult or too expensive to control when a product is in service or during
manufacture of its components. The noise factors can be classifi ed into four
categories:
engineering design
Design noise is the variability introduced into the product due to the design
process. This consists mostly of the tolerance variability that practical design
limitations impose on the design.
External noise , also called outer noise, represents the disturbance factors that
produce variations in the environment in which the product operates. Examples
of external noise factors are temperature, humidity, dust, vibration, and the skill
of the operator of the product.
15
but its use is justifi ed on the basis that it encompasses both the mean (signal) and
the variation (noise) in one parameter, just as the quality loss function does. 1
Following are three forms of the S/N ratio corresponding to the three forms
of the loss function curves shown in Fig. 15.6.
For the nominal-is-best type of problem,
2
S / N =10 log
where = n
(15.15)
ln
2=
yi and
1 (
n 1 i=n 1 yi
=1
15
and n is the number of external noise observation combinations used for each
design parameter matrix (inner array) combination. For example, if four tests are
made to allow for noise for each combination of the control parameters, then n =
4. For the smaller-the-better type of problem,
S / N =10
log
yi2
(15.16)
. Dr. Taguchi was an electrical engineer with the national telephone system of Japan, so the concept of
signal-to-noise ratio, the ratio of signal strength to unwanted interference in a communications circuit, was
very familiar to him.