Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Another Point for Labels!

As it turns out, labels are pretty helpful.

While brushing up on some reading about dry chemical safety (isn't that what everyone peruses in their spare time?), I came across an article about the importance of visual communication in the inspection process of dry chemical fire extinguishers. How about that! Apart from properly functioning valves and pressure gauges, the first thing to consider when inspecting a dry chemical fire extinguisher (and good old regular fire extinguishers, too, I imagine) is the labeling. First, a proper fire extinguisher should indicate the class of fire for which it is meant, and a rating number indicating its extinguishing capabilities. This information should be coupled with a rundown of required chemical levels and weight, suitable temperatures for storage and operation, and some hydrostatic test stickers. It sounds like someone over at the dry chemical fire extinguisher factory has 5S on the brain.

Visual communication as a means to organize, streamline operations, and ultimately deliver pertinent information at the exact point it is needed has become key in any business or operation. Its function to inform, warn, and assist has become seemingly commonplace, yet surprisingly few facilities seem to really embrace its benefits. A simple label or sign can diffuse confusion and enhance understanding. Just as you wouldn't want to pick up that fire extinguisher and pull the pin without knowing proper instructions and whether it was even appropriate for the job, you wouldn't approach a lighting panelboard without knowing which circuits are separated by which breakers. This information is generally communicated via color coding and labeling, two useful tools for making anything -- from panelboards to fire extinguishers -- more user-friendly. (And OSHA-friendly!)

At a loss for how to implement some lean-induced visual communication? Start with the basics. Take a visual tour of your facility or workspace, focusing first on safety (what hazards or warnings ought to be marked? what requires PPE?), and then on organization and function (should the inventory shelving be marked? could that bundle of cords be color-coded?). Then get to the fun part: creating the signs and labels. Try out the DuraLabel PRO , a leading industrial-grade label printer that can generate everything from the tiniest wire wrap to reflective parking lot signs. Working alongside your own PC, this handy printer can produce pipe markers, warehouse labels, NFPA diamonds, and OSHA-compliant safety signs, and more using its own templates or your Microsoft docs.

To take a page from the lean book, check out www.labelprinter.com.

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Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Become TPM Savvy with Labels

Total Productive Maintenance, or TPM, is a wide-ranging program meant to maximize equipment availability. This is achieved with preventive and predictive maintenance. A central idea in TPM is the concept of self-directed maintenance, wherein machine operators are responsible for the routine maintenance and operations of their machines and equipment. With regular, routine maintenance, cleaning, and necessary upgrades, machines and equipment should ultimately improve in functionality and longevity. The major goal of TPM is total elimination of all losses – lost equipment, lost time, lost money. Eradicating these things can lead to improved utilization of production assets and plant capacity, as well as a boost in worker morale.

Graphic Products, Inc., an Oregon-based manufacturer and supplier of industrial-grade printing and labeling products and supplies, provides a key element in getting any facility organized and functional to comply with the TPM philosophy: Labels. By properly and plainly labeling areas, equipment, and maintenance protocol, a workplace will stay more organized and ultimately run more efficiently.

The concept of implementing a standardized labeling system in any facility promotes visual communication, which is simply the idea of communicating pertinent information to a person at the exact point that information is needed. For example, in a wave of TPM overhaul, some specific machinery could be affixed with a series of labels and signage: OSHA-compliant warning labels, RTK labels indicating the type of personal protective equipment (PPE) required for running that machinery, as well as a sign detailing operating instructions, and a sign detailing a maintenance plan. All of this information is presented graphically at the very place the operator most needs it. This is visual communication, and it is a highly effective tool for enhancing efficiency and productivity. Any uncertainty about operating, cleaning, or maintaining the machinery should be eliminated; accidents and injuries should decrease because any hazards or warnings are clearly posted. Graphic Products, Inc., makes this possible with the DuraLabel PRO, the premier labeling machine.This desktop thermal-transfer label printer is extremely versatile and quickly prints anything from small wire wraps to reflective parking signs with the help of your own PC.

As workers become more self-sufficient and proficient in their duties with the help of visual communication, the TPM philosophy can be sustained and a more efficient and ultimately more productive workplace will emerge.

Learn more about how TPM can improve your workplace by requesting a TPM guide, sent to you free.


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Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Kaizen and the Visual Workplace

Two additional sections of our lean manufacturing suite of web sites have come online.

Kaizen - visit this site to learn about kaizen, what it is and the benefits of kaizen. Test your knowledge of kaizen using the free, online Kaizen Quiz.

Visual Workplace - a basic component of all lean methods is visual communication, which results in a visual workplace. Visual communication is the use of labels and signs to communicate information at the point of need, when it is needed. This includes OSHA required safety signs as well as non-required, but still essential labels that identify equipment, and provide operating and maintenance information.

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