Six Sigma Tools Dpu Dpmo PPM and Rty
Six Sigma Tools Dpu Dpmo PPM and Rty
sixsigmadaily.com/dpu-dpmo-ppm-and-rty
When working on a Six Sigma project, accurate methods to measure process performance
metrics are critical for understanding the current state of a process and the value of
changes made. Four of the most common measurements are Defects Per Unit (DPU),
Defects per Million Opportunities (DPMO), Parts per Million Defective (PPM), and the
Rolled Throughput Yield (RTY).
The following provides how each is used. However, it’s important to first understand the
difference between two terms commonly used in connection with these performance
measurement tools. The first is “defect.” The second is “defective.”
Another way to look at this is opportunity vs. units. A unit is the final product delivered to
a customer. It can contain many defects and be found to be defective. Opportunities
represent everything that goes into making a unit – materials, labor, delivery, etc. Each of
these opportunities has the potential of having a defect.
For example, if 30 units are produced and a total of 60 defects have been found, the DPU
equals 2.
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This represents a ratio of the number of defects in one million opportunities. In other
words, how many times did you have a flaw or mistake (defect) for every opportunity
there was to have a flaw or mistake.
For example, consider a form that contains 15 fields of information. If 10 forms are
sampled and 26 defects are found in the sample, the DPMO is:
It’s also possible to translate DPMO to a Six Sigma level. The goal is to reach 3.4 defects
per 1 million opportunities.
PPM is arrived at by simply taking the number of defective units in a same size, dividing
that number by the total sample size, and multiplying by 1 million.
For example, a sample of 50 cards found that three are defective. The PPM defective is
then:
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The reliability formula for a system in series with n process steps is: Rs = (R1) (R2) (R3)
(R4) … (Rn)
Since the reliability of a process step is the yield of that process step when quality is the
performance metric, this formula then becomes: RTY= (Y1) (Y2) (Y3) (Y4) … (Yn) where Y
is the yield (proportion good) for each step
For example, a four-step process has a yield of 0.98 in step 1, 0.95 in step 2, 0.90 in step
3, and 0.80 in step 4.
This means that only 67.032% of the units completed on this process will make it through
all four steps without needing any rework or repair.
Once an organization understands the different performance measurement tools and how
to use them, the important next step is to determine how to calculate baseline sigma and
determine what other metrics to measure.
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