Quality control of equipment manufactured at the Dzerzhinsk chemical machinery manufacturing plant

1972 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-67
Author(s):  
V. A. Polushkin
Author(s):  
B. Terry Beck ◽  
Aaron A. Robertson ◽  
Robert J. Peterman ◽  
Kyle A. Riding ◽  
John Wu

Transfer length has been identified as a key diagnostic parameter for evaluating the load bearing capability of prestressed concrete railroad crossties. Furthermore, it has been proposed for use as a valuable quality control parameter. However, until quite recently the capability to easily and accurately measure transfer length has been limited primarily to a laboratory setting. This is especially true for measurements made in the harsh environment of a tie manufacturing plant. The development of portable non-contact optical strain sensors has opened the door to rapid in-plant transfer length measurement. The measurement capability of these devices has been repeatedly demonstrated not only in the laboratory, but more importantly also through actual testing at multiple tie manufacturing plants. The latest version of the automated Laser-Speckle Imaging (LSI) system developed by the authors offers improved optical resolution of longitudinal surface strain, with the ability to resolve longitudinal prestressed concrete crosstie surface strain without time-consuming special surface preparation. The new system is also capable of making measurements of strain in a real-time “on-the-fly” manner over the entire distance range of interest on the tie associated with transfer length development. This faster capability to capture the strain profile with high resolution makes this new technology very beneficial for field testing and in-plant diagnostics applications. It has been demonstrated to be capable of resolving minor differences in longitudinal surface strain profiles associated with ties even in adjacent cavities. As a logical next step toward eventual implementation of transfer length as a quality control parameter, it is important to evaluate the expected variation of transfer length during the tie manufacturing process. This paper presents the results of extensive in-plant assessment of transfer length in an attempt to characterize experimentally the in-plant manufacturing variations that can occur in practice. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first time extensive real-time measurements to this extent have been attempted in an actual tie manufacturing plant with the expressed purpose of statistically characterizing the variations in transfer length that take place over an entire casting bed. A sampling of transfer lengths from well over 50 ties was determined during the manufacturing process (corresponding to over 100 transfer length measurements). The sampled tie measurement locations were distributed at different “form” locations along the casting bed, and included samplings of ties from several different “cavities” within a given form. The entire bed was 45 forms in length, each form having 6 tie cavities, for a total bed size of 270 ties. The statistical distribution of overall transfer length measurement results is presented, along with what may be typical variations in strain profile and resulting transfer length as a result of variations that took place in the manufacturing process. The overall range of transfer length observed, along with an investigation of possible bias due to position within the casting bed, and apparent variations of transfer length within a given form, are identified and discussed.


2004 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 341-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guo-Bing Xiao ◽  
Patrick G. Dempsey ◽  
Ling Lei ◽  
Zao-Hua Ma ◽  
You-Xin Liang

2021 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nataliia Kovshun ◽  
Viktor Yakimtsov ◽  
Nataliia Nalyvaiko ◽  
Sofiia Sukhoniak

Existing national and foreign approaches to the organization of the outsourcing services are studied and analyzed. It is established that the existing approaches carry fragment character and they do not provide the enterprise with the ability to substantially evaluate the necessity and the effectiveness of the outsourcing applying.  It is offered to include the following items to the main stages of the outsourcing realization process within the activity of the machinery manufacturing plant: definition of the reasons for outsourcing, search of the partner, conclusion of the agreement, execution of the agreement, project closing. The method for outsourcing involvement efficiency is developed through comparing the relevant expenses of the enterprise, taking into consideration the structure of the conditionally changeable expenses. It is discovered that the current method provides the enterprise with the possibility to take a decision as to the possibility of outsourcing involvement, or execution of the functions independently. Practical recommendations for the enterprises as to the application of the outsourcing or the insourcing depending on the dominating conditionally constant or conditionally changeable expenses in the structure are developed. The approach to the evaluation of the outsourcing efficiency in accordance with the indicators system is established, which foresees the application of the developed key efficiency indicators system with finding of the integral value to take the decision about the efficiency of involvement of the outsourcing services is provided. Practical calculations of the efficiency and the effectiveness of the outsourcing involvement on the machinery building plants are presented.


2013 ◽  
Vol 711 ◽  
pp. 468-472
Author(s):  
Ji Tao Fang ◽  
Wei Wei Deng ◽  
Hui Wang

The discrete manufacturing plant is the basic of executing enterprises agile manufacture strategy, between enterprise upper management systems and manufacturing process control systems. The constitute structure and the software model of a workshop integrated quality control system is introduced by this paper. The methods and technologies of traditional workshop management cant meet current needs of enterprises. The field management and workshop information integration are given more and more attention by enterprises. In contrary to conventional SPC applications, manufacturing plant based unmanned manufacturing environments require automation of the quality control process. The system is suitable for the production process quality analysis and judgment in the discrete manufacturing plant environment. It can significantly increase the product quality and economic efficiency of enterprises.


2003 ◽  
Vol 118 (3) ◽  
pp. 193-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey W McKenna ◽  
Terry F Pechacek ◽  
Donna F Stroup

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