Painting the 3Daycar: Developing a New Approach to Automotive Coatings and Lean Manufacture 2001-01-3179
Automotive painting is essential not only for providing a flawless and emissions free system of body coating, but as a key enabler of customer order fulfillment. Paint shops in the UK and Europe continue to require large batch-sizes, long lead-times and suffer from high levels of defects. This represents considerable waste in the system, contrary to the principles of lean manufacture and building-to-order. This research suggests that the role of the paint shop may be changing, where the emphasis on production is moving towards customer-pull, total system reliability and batch sizes of one. Whilst the advance in water-borne and powder technology are likely to remain of an incremental nature, new manufacturing concepts such as alternative body construction and thermoplastic in-molded color panel technology, may radically change how coatings are applied during vehicle production.
Citation: Howard, M. and Graves, A., "Painting the 3Daycar: Developing a New Approach to Automotive Coatings and Lean Manufacture," SAE Technical Paper 2001-01-3179, 2001, https://doi.org/10.4271/2001-01-3179. Download Citation
Author(s):
Mickey Howard, Andrew Graves
Affiliated:
School of Management, University of Bath
Pages: 7
Event:
Automotive and Transportation Technology Congress and Exposition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
ATTCE 2001 Proceedings Volume 3 - Manufacturing-P-369, SAE 2001 Transactions Journal of Materials & Manufacturing-V110-5
Related Topics:
Coatings, colorants, and finishes
Production
Thermoplastics
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