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Production system design elements influencing productivity and ergonomics: A case study of parallel and serial flow strategies

W.P. Neumann (National Institute for Working Life, Gothenburg Sweden Department of Design Sciences, Lund Technical University, Lund, Sweden Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada)
J. Winkel (National Institute for Working Life, Gothenburg Sweden)
L. Medbo (Department of Transport and Logisitics, Chalmers Technical University, Gothenburg, Sweden)
R. Magneberg (National Institute for Working Life, Gothenburg Sweden)
S.E. Mathiassen (Centre for Musculoskeletal Research, University of Gävle, Sweden)

International Journal of Operations & Production Management

ISSN: 0144-3577

Article publication date: 1 August 2006

5952

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate a strategic change from parallel cell‐based assembly (old) to serial‐line assembly (new) in a Swedish company with special reference to how production system design elements affect both productivity and ergonomics.

Design/methodology/approach

Multiple methods, including records and video analysis, questionnaires, interviews, biomechanical modelling, and flow simulation were applied.

Findings

The new system, unlike the old, showed the emergence of system and balance losses as well as vulnerability to disturbances and difficulty handling all product variants. Nevertheless, the new system as realised partially overcame productivity barriers in the operation and management of the old system. The new system had impaired ergonomics due to decreased physical variation and increased repetitiveness with cycle times that were 6 per cent of previous thus increasing repetitiveness, and significantly reducing perceived influence over work. Workstations' uneven exposure to physical tasks such as nut running created a potential problem for workload management. The adoption of teamwork in the new system contributed to significantly increased co‐worker support – an ergonomic benefit.

Practical implications

Design decisions made early in the development process affect both ergonomics and productivity in the resulting system. While the time pattern of physical loading appeared to be controlled by flow and work organisation elements, the amplitude of loading was determined more by workstation layout. Psychosocial conditions appear to be affected by a combination of system elements including layout, flow, and work organisation elements. Strategic use of parallelisation elements in assembly, perhaps in hybrid forms from configurations observed here, appears to be a viable design option for improved performance by reducing the fragility and ergonomic problems of assembly lines.

Originality/value

The interacting design elements examined here pose potential “levers” of control by which productivity and ergonomics could be jointly optimised for improved total system performance.

Keywords

Citation

Neumann, W.P., Winkel, J., Medbo, L., Magneberg, R. and Mathiassen, S.E. (2006), "Production system design elements influencing productivity and ergonomics: A case study of parallel and serial flow strategies", International Journal of Operations & Production Management, Vol. 26 No. 8, pp. 904-923. https://doi.org/10.1108/01443570610678666

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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