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Dearborn Truck Plant To Showcase Lean, Flexible Manufacturing In Best-in-class Facility
- The Dearborn Truck Plant will
produce the all-new Ford F-150 beginning in 2004.
- Dearborn
Truck will be Ford's most flexible plant worldwide, able to produce
up to nine different models off three vehicle platforms.
- The Dearborn Truck Plant will be a flagship of `lean'
manufacturing - an industry-wide benchmark of maximum efficiency and
highest quality, which was first conceived and articulated by Henry
Ford in the 1920s.
- Dearborn Truck Plant's final assembly
building design will set new workplace standards for employee
ergonomics, physical comfort and safety.
| DEARBORN, Mich., June 12,
2003 - When the new Dearborn Truck Plant begins production in 2004,
it will be more than the new home to the new Ford F-150. It will
signal an expansion of the company's manufacturing vision, as the
legendary Ford Rouge Center becomes a manufacturing model for the
21st century. The plant will be the flagship of Ford's
next-generation lean and flexible manufacturing facilities. For
example: - It will be capable of producing up to nine
different models from three vehicle platforms, making it Ford's most
flexible plant worldwide.
- The 16 standardized work cells that make up the flexible
manufacturing body shop are made of fewer than 300 parts. This
standardization cuts costs and means quicker product
changeovers.
- The number of workstations in final assembly
will be reduced by nearly 40 percent.
- Component inventory
requirements will be reduced by 40 percent.
Pacesetting Flexibility The Dearborn Truck Plant
is another example of Ford's commitment to establish its new,
next-generation flexible manufacturing system in its North American
assembly operations. By mid-decade, about half of Ford's body
shops, trim and final assembly operations will be flexible. That
number will rise to 75 percent by the end of the decade. The system
is expected to save the company $1.5 to 2 billion in the coming
decade. Dearborn Truck's flexible features include the
ability to: quickly change the plant's production according to
customer demand; easily retool and reprogram robots and computers
with improved changeover time; reduce initial investment and
changeover costs with standardized components and processes.
"With increasing market segmentation, Ford's new flexible
assembly system means the company can react more quickly to meet
changing customer demand," said Roman Krygier, group vice
president, Global Manufacturing and Quality. "We will be able to
produce a wider variety of vehicles, change the mix of products and
options, and change volumes - faster and with minimal added cost.
Those are benefits we can pass along to our customers."
Lean Manufacturing Dearborn Truck is implementing
world-class lean manufacturing standards that include synchronous
material flow (SMF), In-Line Vehicle Sequencing, waste reduction
and team-based processes for problem solving and strict quality
control. Dearborn Truck's SMF is based on a weekly
predictive scheduling system, which coordinates with suppliers to
provide just-in-time component inventory for vehicle production,
minimizing on-site inventories. Using the same schedule, In-Line
Vehicle Sequencing produces vehicles in a particular order, so that
vehicle bodies match the proper components and arrive at the
operator at precisely the right time and place. Both processes help
Ford reduce waste, and vehicle and parts storage space, as well as
optimize production efficiency. |