|
As a true preventive tool, control charts for variable
data provide the measure of process improvement. Since all applications
are not the same, Quality America is proud to offer a wide variety of
these tools to meet your specific needs. From short run to continuous
flow, administration to maintenance, your profitability can be improved.
SPC-PC IV offers the following charts for
variable data:
- X Bar/Range
The
classic Shewhart control chart, with provisions to:
- Allow missing or deleted data, adjusting control
limits accordingly.
- Permit control and/or warning limits at the user-specified
sigma level.
- Automatically exclude out of control points from
calculations, at the users option.
- Include the effect of Western Electric, Nelson,
and user-defined Run Tests.
- Perform Short Run Analysis.
- Set multiple ranges for control, so process changes
can be controlled to their new level.
- X Bar/Sigma
With
the same flexibility found in the X Bar/R charts, these charts provide
a more precise indicator of standard deviation.
- Individual X/Moving Range
Preferred
by many customers for their easy interpretation, decreased sampling
costs, or when subgroups do not provide a real measure of process variation,
SPC-PC IV provides the same flexibility found in the X-Bar charts, plus:
- Your choice of control limits, using either the
Normal distribution or Quality Americas unique Johnson Control
Charts for non-normal processes.
- Control limits and Run Tests based on the selected
distribution.
- Process Capability Analysis
To
truly measure the capability of your process both your process output
and your requirements must be correctly stated. SPC-PC IV provides analysis
options capable of meeting your requirements. SPC-PC IV uses any of
the following distributions, at your option:
- Normal.
- Johnson: provides one of the Johnson family of
bounded or unbounded curves fitted to the data (includes the normal
and log normal).
- Folded Normal: typically used for TIR measurements,
such as concentricity, roundness, flatness, etc.
- Rayleigh: used in ANSI Y14.5 positional measurement
systems.
- Weibull: used extensively to model reliability
and particle size distribution.
- Calculations include Cp, Cpk, Cr, Cpm, and Z values,
as well as predicted yields. Confidence limits are available for
capability indices. SPC-PC IV also provides comparison of non-normal
and normal assumptions.
- Short Run Analysis
Applying standard control limit constants to a short run of only fifteen
subgroups of size five will double the probability of false alarms
and result in tampering with an in-control process. Short Run uses multiple
parts (or doctors, billing types, etc.), each constituting a distinct
run, to determine common characteristics of the process
for all runs. Available as an option in X-bar, Individual-X, EWMA, Process
Capability, P, Np, C and U charts.
- Scatter Diagram
To
examine the relationship between two different characteristics, regression
techniques are used to estimate linear models and the correlation between
the characteristics. Confidence Limits may be used to identify data
which does not fit the regression model.
- CuSum
When
the cost of process shifts or sampling is high, many customers use the
CuSum chart for increased sensitivity to small process shifts, or for
comparable protection at lower sampling costs.
- Autocorrelation Function
An
analysis tool rather than a control tool, the Autocorrelation function
provides a means of determining the extent to which current process
conditions are dependent on previous conditions. If autocorrelation
is significant, standard control charting may not be used since the
independence assumption is violated. In these cases, the EWMA chart
for drifting means may be used, or the autocorrelation parameters may
be used with QA, Inc.s spreadsheet functions to model the process.
Errors from the model may then be controlled using standard control
charts.
- Exponentially Weighted
Moving Average
Similar
to the CuSum in detecting small shifts in an otherwise stable process
mean, the EWMA chart provided by QA, Inc. may also be used to control
processes with a slowly drifting mean using Montgomerys technique
for autocorrelated processes.
- Moving Average/Moving
Range or Moving Sigma These tools are useful for controlling
processes with inconsequential cyclical patterns which would otherwise
produce false warnings on standard charts.
- Multivariate
Controlling
several related characteristics individually will not always signal
true shifts in the process. SPC-PC IVs Multivariate Analysis provides
the T2 and SPE (Squared Prediction Error) Control Chart for detecting
process shifts, and Contribution Charts for identifying the key process
variables responsible for the shift.
|