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Eight Steps or Principles for SMED - Shigeo Shingo

STEP 1 SEPARATE INTERNAL FROM EXTERNAL SETUP OPERATIONS :

Internal setup operations have to be done when machine is not running or producing. External
setup operations can be done when the machine is doing its production job.
Examine and identify which of the current setup operations must be performed while the machine is
shut down and which can be performed when the machine is running . For example, transportation
of dies, jigs, fixtures, tools and materials to and from the machine can be done while the machine is
running. Any preparatory activity on the die to be setup can be done without stopping the machine.
Internal setup should be limited to removing the old die or tool and placing and securing the new
one.
By simply separating and organizing external and internal operations in traditional setup operations,
internal setup time can be reduced by 30 to 50 per cent

Step 2 CONVERT INTERNAL TO EXTERNAL SETUP :

There are opportunities convert some internal operations to external setup operations. For
example, one can avoid the internal setup time involved in shut height adjustments for the press
dies, by standardizing the die height and by attaching blocks or shims to smaller dies. Another
simple conversion is to preheat dies for die-casting, which eliminates heating the die by trial shot
after its was placed in the machine.

Shut Height - Distance between the upper dead center and the lower dead centre in a die.

Step 3 STANDARDIZE FUNCTION, NOT SHAPE :

Standardizing the shape and size of dies can reduce setup times considerably. Shape
standardization is wasteful, however, because all dies would have to confirm to the largest size
used, which would increase costs unnecessarily.
Function standardization, on the other hand, requires only uniformity in the parts and features
necessary for setup operations. For example, adding a plate or block to the attachment edge of the
die standardizes the dimensions of that part only and makes it possible to use the same clamps in
different setups. The functions identified by Shingo in his book are clamping, centering,
dimensioning, expelling, grasping, and maintaining loads. The engineers or industrial engineers
must study various dies and standardize the features of the die that necessitate changes.

Step 4 USE FUNCTIONAL CLAMPS OR ELIMINATE FASTERNERS ALTOGETHER:

Bolts are most commonly used to attach the die to ram and machine body, but tightening bolts can
be very time consuming. Normally, about with fifteen threads must be turned fourteen times before
it is actually tightened on the last turn. But Shingo's insight is that only the last turn tightens the bolt
and the first loosens it the other thirteen are wasted motion. If the purpose of the bolt is simply to
fasten or unfasten, it should be just long enough for fasten in one turn. A bolt with one turn
possibility is called a functional clamp by Shingo. One-turn functional clamps include the I- slot
method, the pear shaped hole method, and the external clamp.
Threaded screws are by no means the only way to secure items. There are methods and industrial
engineers have to explore then and examine them. One touch methods using wedges, cams, and
clamps or springs reduce setup times considerably, as do interlocking improvements that simply fit
and join two parts together. These methods can reduce setup times to seconds.
In clamping methods, the direction and magnitude of force required in the situation are critical
considerations.An analysis needs to be done to find what is neeed to design the clamping method.
At Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, for example, stoppers were screwed to each of the spindles of a
boring machine in a difficult and time-consuming way in extremely cramped conditions. An
examination showed they are not necessary. This operation was improved by cutting grooves near
the end of the spindles and attaching three springs around the edge of each stopper. When the
stopper was placed over the end of the spindle, the springs snapped into the groove, and the spring
tension held the stopper in place. This shortened the time for securing and removing stopper
considerably.

Step 5 USE INTERMEDIATE JIGS :

While the work piece attached to one jig is being processed, the next work piece is centered and
attached to a second jig that is easily mounted on the machine for processing. This is using a
duplicate jig to load the center the workpiece as an external operation.

For example, on a profile milling machine, blocks for television picture tubes were being made.
Marking off for concurring and setting heights for the template and the material was done as internal
setup on the bed of the machine. Because of the many curves in the blocks, this was a complicated
and time consuming operation. Two jigs were constructed. While one item is machined, a template
and next work piece are attached to the other jig, then centred and set for proper height. Clamps
are used to mount the jigs quickly and easily on the table. Intermediate jigs can also be used on
large process with multiple dies of different sizes and heights. In that situation, they are used to
move the internal centering and securing operations off the machine. With this improvement, the
press needs to be turned off only while a forklift switches the intermediate jigs with the dies already
mounted.

Step 66 ADOPT PARALLEL OPERATIONS :

Operations on plastic molding or die-casting machines and large presses invariably involve setup
work on both sides or at both the front and back of the of the machine.

If only one worker performs these operations, much time and motion are wasted as he goes from
side to side or back and forth around the machine. But when two people perform the parallel
operations simultaneously. Setup time is usually reduced by more than half, due to the economies
of movement. The assistance for these operations can be provided by even the foreman.

Step 7 : ELIMINATE ADJUSTMENTS :

Typically, adjustments and trials runs account for 50 to 70 percent of internal setup time. Their
elimination products tremendous time savings. The assumption that adjustment is an unavoidable
leads to unnecessarily lengthy internal setup times and requires a high level of skills and
experience on the part of the operator. Adjustments can be eliminated, however, if a gauge is used
to precisely determine the correct position of the limit switch. The first setup in doing away with it is
to make calibrations which eliminate the need to rely on intuition. If an approximation is all that is
required, a gradated scale may be sufficient, but it cannot do away with adjustments altogether.
Greater precision is achieved using a dial gauge magnescale, or numerical control device.

Of course, the best kind of adjustment is no adjustment at all. For example, the least common
multiple (LCM) system is based on the principle and that adjustment can be eliminated entirely
when the number of setting is limited and unvarying.
In one plant, a limit switch was used to set the end point in machining shaft. Since there were five
shaft lengths the switch had to be moved to five different location. It could not be positioned
correctly without as many as four trial adjustments every time the set up changed. By installed limit
switches at the five sites, each equipped with an electrical switch that is supplied with current
independently of the other switches, this problem was eliminated Now setup is performed by flipping
a switch.

A second example of the LCM approach:. In this operation, a drill was used to countersink a hole
for a stationery screw in a motor core shaft. Stoppers had to be repositioned for eight different
lengths which made repeated test runs and adjustments necessary. The adjustments were
eliminated by mounting stopper plugs of eight different heights on a single plate. To change
operations, to plate is simply rotated to set the stopper at the desired height and then secured. This
one-touch method reduced internal setup to a matter of seconds.

The LCM approach as well as the one-touch and interlocking methods simplify setting or positioning
and eliminate adjustment. For example, some presses are sold with adjustable shut heights
because different companies have different requirements. This does not mean, companies actually
operate with dies of varying shut heights. These companies should either standardize the heights or
purchase presses customized for their needs. The same faculty logic is evident when expensive
presses are equipped with motorized adjustable shut heights and highly accurate adjustment
functions. When there is no need for adjustments, why invest in such functions with it is much more
economical to eliminate adjustments through standardization.

Step 8 : MECHANIZATION :

Although changing small blades, jigs, dies and gauges does not pose much of a problem,
mechanization is often essential to efficiently move large dies, casting dies, and plastic molds. Oil
and air pressure can be used for convenient one-touch attachment of dies.
Investment in mechanization should, however, be considered very carefully. Recently, many
companies have standardized the dimension of clamping plates and finished them to a high degree
of precision. One-touch clamping is then performed by inserting these plates into special clamping
fixtures. However, only the die actually forms the product considering the purpose of the operation,
it is wasteful to finish clamping to a high degree of precision.
Mechanization should be considered only after every effort has been made to improve setups using
the techniques described. The first seven principles can reduce a two-hour setup to three minutes,
and mechanization will probably reduce that time only by another minute.

SMED is an analytical approach to setup improvement of which mechanization is only one


component.
One should attempt to mechanize setups after they have first been thoroughly streamlined by
applying the SMED principles.

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