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Thesis Guidelines IE President University

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Page 1: Thesis Guidelines IE President University

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THIS IS THE INSTRUCTIONS

FOR WRITING THESIS AT INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING PROGRAM PRESIDENT UNIVERSITY

(Center, Times New Roman 16 bold, Single line spacing, no adding space between lines)

By Johan Oscar

ID No. xxxxxxxxx (Center, Times New Roman 14 bold, Single line spacing, no adding space

between lines)

A Thesis presented to the Faculty of Engineering President University in partial fulfillment of the requirements of Bachelor Degree in

Engineering Major in Industrial Engineering (Times New Roman 14 bold)

2012 (Times New Roman 14 bold)

2 single space, TNR 16

6 single space, TNR 16

(can be adjusted if the

title is too long)

5 single space, TNR 14

6 single space, TNR 14

A4, 80gram

Margin:

left= 4 cm,

Bottom=right= top= 3 cm

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THESIS ADVISOR

RECOMMENDATION LETTER

(Center, Times New Roman 16 bold, 1.5 line spacing, no adding

space between lines)

This thesis entitled “Increasing Line Efficiency in W1234 by using

Time Study and Line Balancing (A case study in PTXI)” prepared

and submitted by Yosi Twentiarani in partial fulfillment of the

requirements for the degree of Bachelor Degree in the Faculty of

Engineering has been reviewed and found to have satisfied the

requirements for a thesis fit to be examined. I therefore recommend

this thesis for Oral Defense. (TNR 14pt, 1.5 space, no adding space

between lines)

Cikarang, Indonesia, January 31th, 2012

Herwan Yusmira, Bsc. MET, MTech. (Advisor name)

2 enter 1.5 space, TNR 16

2 enter 1.5 space, TNR 14

4 enter 1.5 space, TNR 14

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DECLARATION OF ORIGINALITY

I declare that this thesis, entitled “Increasing Line Efficiency in

W1234 by using Time Study and Line Balancing (A case study in

PTXI)” is, to the best of my knowledge and belief, an original piece

of work that has not been submitted, either in whole or in part, to

another university to obtain a degree.

Cikarang, Indonesia, January 31th, 2012

Yosi Twentiarani

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INCREASING LINE EFFICIENCY OF W 1234 BY

USING TIME STUDY AND LINE BALANCING

(A case study in PTXI)

(Center, Times New Roman 16 bold, 1.5 line spacing, no adding

space between lines)

By

Yosi Twentiarani

ID No. 00420080023

Approved by

Herwan Yusmira, B.Sc. MET, MTech Herwan Yusmira, B.Sc. MET, MTech Thesis Advisor Program Head of Industrial Engineering

(TNR 12, 1.5 line spacing)

Dr.-Ing Erwin Sitompul Dean of the Faculty of Engineering

7 enter 1.5 space, TNR 12

6 enter 1.5 space, TNR 14

1 enter 1.5 space, TNR 14

3 enter 1.5 space, TNR 16

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ABSTRACT

Abstract should be written not more than 200 words in Times New Roman 12 pt

with 1.5 line spacing. Abstract should include all of the research, starting from

background, research methodology, and the results. At the end of this abstract has

to be provided with at least six keywords.

Keywords: at least six keywords

2 enter 1.5 space, TNR 12

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

This thesis is hardly to be done without a big support. Therefore, I would like to

express my gratitude to:

1. Jesus Christ, the source of everything. Thank you for unconditional love that

You have given to me.

2. My family. Thank you for believing and loving me. I love you all.

(Times New Roman 12pt with 1.5 line spacing, no adding space between lines)

2 enter 1.5 space, TNR 12

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

THESIS ADVISOR RECOMMENDATION LETTER ....................................... i

DECLARATION OF ORIGINALITY ................................................................. ii

APPROVAL PAGE .............................................................................................. iii

ABSTRACT .......................................................................................................... v

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT .................................................................................... vi

TABLE OF CONTENTS ...................................................................................... vii

LIST OF TABLES ................................................................................................ ix

LIST OF FIGURES .............................................................................................. x

LIST OF TERMINOLOGIES ............................................................................... xi

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION .......................................................................... 1

1.1. Background ............................................................................................ 1

1.2. Problem Statement ................................................................................. 4

1.3. Objectives ............................................................................................... 4

1.4. Scope ...................................................................................................... 5

1.5. Assumption ............................................................................................ 5

1.6. Research Outline .................................................................................... 5

CHAPTER 2 LITERATURE STUDY................................................................. 9

2.1. Vehicle Routing Problem ....................................................................... 9

2.1.1 Definition ...................................................................................... 9

2.1.2 Basic VRP Model .......................................................................... 10

2.1.2.1 Travelling Salesman Problem ........................................... 10

2.1.2.2 Set Part Partitioning .......................................................... 11

2.1.3 VRP Classifications ...................................................................... 12

2.2. Vehicle Routing Problem with Time Window (VRPTW) ....................... 14

2.3. Vehicle Routing Problem with Multiple Trips (VRPMT) ...................... 15

CHAPTER III RESEARCH METHODOLOGY ................................................. 33

3.1. Initial Observation .................................................................................. 33

3.2. Problem Identification ............................................................................ 34

3.3. Literature Study ...................................................................................... 36

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3.4. Data Collection and Calculation ............................................................ 36

3.4.1 Data gathering and observation ......................................................... 36

3.4.2 Data tabulation and calculation ......................................................... 36

3.5. Analysis .................................................................................................. 37

3.6. Conclusion and Recommendation .......................................................... 37

CHAPTER IV DATA ANALYSIS ...................................................................... 38

4.1. Initial Efficiency ..................................................................................... 38

4.2. Improvement through Kaizen 555 ......................................................... 39

CHAPTER V CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION ............................ 78

5.1. Conclusion.............................................................................................. 78

5.2. Recommendation .................................................................................... 79

REFERENCES ...................................................................................................... 80

APPENDICES ...................................................................................................... 81

Appendix 1 Picture of Equipments ........................................................ 81

Appendix 2 OPC of W1234 before Observation ................................... 86

(Times New Roman 12pt with 1.5 line spacing, no adding space between lines)

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LIST OF TABLES

Table 3.1 Comparison table among four techniques of work measurement .... 3-3

Table 3.2 Westinghouse System Scoring ......................................................... 3-4

Table 4.1 Performance factor calculation ........................................................ 4-1

(The table should be ordered by number of chapter and followed by the sequence

of the table in that chapter. For instance, Table 3.1 can be found in chapter 3 and

the first table in chapter 3)

2 enter 1.5 space, TNR 12

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LIST OF FIGURES

Figure 3.1 Example of Operation Process Chart ............................................... 3-3

Figure 3.2 An example of precedence diagram ................................................. 3-4

Figure 4.1 Flowchart of simulation making ...................................................... 4-1

(The figure should be ordered by number of chapter and followed by the sequence

of the figure in that chapter. For instance, Figure 3.1 can be found in chapter 3

and the first figure in chapter 3)

2 enter 1.5 space, TNR 12

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LIST OF TERMINOLOGIES

Balance delay : the amount of idle on production assembly lines caused by the

uneven division of work among operators and stations

Cycle time : the period required to complete one cycle of an operation, or to

complete a function, job, or task from start to finish

(Times New Roman 12pt with 1.5 line spacing, no adding space between lines)

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CHAPTER I

INTRODUCTION (TNR 16, 1.5space)

1.1.Problem Background

Having high efficiency is very beneficial for a company. One of the benefits is

related to the internal of the company itself. When the efficiency is high, it means

that all resources such as men, raw material, machines, and space are well-

utilized. Thus, excess resources can be allocated for other projects. Moreover, the

company could also spend proper cost of production when the efficiency is high.

Another benefit is increase the value of the company in the midst of business

competition. The company will be able to produce more output with a shorter lead

time in fulfilling demand from customers. Those are some benefits of having high

efficiency.

1.2.Problem Statement

The background of the problem leads into the statement below.

• What is the root cause of having low line efficiency in costume sewing of

W1234?

• How to increase the line efficiency in costume sewing of W1234?

1.3.Objectives

The main objective of this research is to increase the line efficiency in from 57.6%

into 90%. Absolutely, it also means that the target output will be achieved, 500

finished costumes a day. Thus the overtime will be eliminated. By doing this final

project, there are some secondary objectives could be achieved. Those are:

• Removing hand-to-mouth system

• Reducing cost of production

1.4.Scope

Due to limited time and resources in doing this research, there will be some scope

in the observation:

2 enter 1.5 space, TNR 12

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• The observation is only done in dress part of W1234.

• This project is done in October, 12 -20, 2011.

• Adding or eliminating sewing operator could be executed by Sewing

Production Department.

1.5.Assumption

Some assumptions have to be made in order to run this model properly.

• There will be no defect in the midst of sewing process.

• The target output is always the same.

1.6.Research Outline

Chapter I Introduction

This chapter consists of the background of final project, project

identification, objective, scope and assumption of the study.

Chapter II Literature Study

This chapter delivers the previous study about time study, line

balancing, and other tools which support this final project.

Chapter III Research Methodology

The flow of this final project is explained in this chapter.

Chapter IV Data Analysis

The data observation is processed and analyzed in this chapter. The

result of data analysis is a new arrangement of line W1234 which

expected to increase the line efficiency.

Chapter V Conclusion and Recommendation

This chapter will give the conclusion result of this final project,

and also recommendation for future research.

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CHAPTER II

LITERATURE STUDY

2.1.Normality Test

Beside the normality, the uniformity of the data also needs to be examined. A set

of data may fulfill the law in normality test but the variance is too wide. Thus the

data is significantly different one another. Therefore, a limit must be created in

this test to make sure that all data is in expected range area. If it is found a data

outside the limit, that data must be removed. These are the steps to determine the

uniformity of a set of data:

a. Calculate average observed time (�̅) for each operation.

�̅ = ∑ ����� (2-1)

b. Calculate the standard deviation (s) of each operation (Wignjosoebroto, 2000).

� = �∑ (����̅)������ (2-2)

(All equations have to be numbered by number of chapter following the order of the equation in the chapter. For instance, equation 2-1can be found in chapter 2 and located at the second equation).

(All table, figures, drawings and half-tone illustrations (pictures) should, as far as possible, appear in appropriate place within the body of the text, and must be in a form suitable for printing. The alignment of a figure is in center and in left for a table. Figures should be in frameless format)

Table 4.1 Sewing line efficiency of W1234 (TNR 11pt bold)

Date Operator Overtime Output Line

(hours) (in thousand) Efficiency 10-Oct-11 9 16 0.3 44.6% 11-Oct-11 9 16 0.375 55.8% 14-Oct-11 9 34 0.5 61.8% 15-Oct-11 9 30 0.5 64.2%

Total 141 2.535

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Figure 4.1 Yamazumi Chart of W1234 in the initial observation by Kaizen 555 team (TNR 11pt Bold) Citing References • The references should be listed in the alphabetical order of the author names

and in the order of the publication years within the same author’s works. • Each reference should be written in the order of the authors, the publication

year, the title or source. • Journal names, names of conferences, proceedings, and book titles should be

italicized and should have the first character of each word uppercase, except for the conjunctions and articles.

• The article title should be written between apostrophes, e.g., ”The Example of….” and should have the first character of each word uppercase, except for the conjunctions and articles. The volume, series and pages are written consecutively.

• The three or more authors of a reference should be written as the first author followed by 'et al.', for instance, (Forza et al.,1993) at the end of a sentence, Forza et al. (1993) in a sentence. It is recommended to avoid referring a Web source since the availability is not secured. If there is an official document source, for instance, a journal paper, for the same document, please refer the official document. However, you may sparingly use Web sources. In the case, when available, the title, the author name, and the year should be clarified in addition to the detailed address.

References Forza, C., Vinelli, A., and Filippini, R., Telecommunication Services for Quick Response in the Textile-Apparel Industry, Proceedings of the 1st International Symposium on Logistics, The University of Nottingham, 1993, pp. 119-26.

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Workstation

Initial Observation in Kaizen 555

Initial Observation in Kaizen 555

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Holmes, C. C., and Mallick, B. K., Generalized Nonlinear Modeling with Multivariate Free-Knot, Journal of the American Statistical Association, 98(462), 2003, pp. 352-365. Klir, J., and Yuan, B., Fuzzy Sets and Fuzzy Logic: Theory and Applications, Prentice-Hall, New Delhi, 2001. Lyche, T., and Morken, K., Spline Methods, Draft, 2004, retrieved from http://www.ubuion./umn/english/index.html on 09 November 2009. Mallian, H., Studi Literatur tentang Model Peramalan ARMA(p,q) dan Selang Keper-cayaan Parameter Model dengan Menggunakan Bootstrap, Tugas Akhir, Jurusan Teknik Industri, Universitas Kristen Petra, Surabaya, 2006.