Molders rate quality of today's small machines.For the first time in print, users rate the quality of small injection machines and their suppliers--by brand name. If you want to know how a machine performs in the real world, the soundest practical advice is "Ask someone who owns one." We derided to go that one better: We asked 10,338 injection molders at 4729 plants to tell us about the small machines they own and about the suppliers that built them. We mailed a questionnaire questionnaire, n a series of questions used to gather information. questionnaire, n a form usually filled out by patients that provides data concerning their dental and general health. to all our injection molding injection molding n. A manufacturing process for forming objects, as of plastic or metal, by heating the molding material to a fluid state and injecting it into a mold. readers at plants with machines of 0-99 tons (Transparent Optical Networking Services) A marketing term for providing dark fiber to a customer. The customer is responsible for generating the transmission signal and interpreting it at the other end. See dark fiber. clamp clamp (klamp) a surgical device for compressing a part or structure. rubber dam clamp a metallic device used to retain the dam on a tooth. clamp n. force that we identified through the PLASTICS TECHNOLOGY Manufacturing Census. We restricted our questions to machines purchased new in the last five years (1988 to 1993) in order to obtain opinions relevant to the technological level of machines on the market today. We received 1644 replies, 714 of them from firms that had purchased new small presses in the 1988-93 time period. The latter group were asked to rate the performance of those machines. Results were tabulated for us by an outside market-research firm. WHO ANSWERED THE SURVEY In some cases, there was more than one reply from the same plant. However, a count of the different zip codes zip code System of postal-zone codes (zip stands for “zone improvement plan”) introduced in the U.S. in 1963 to improve mail delivery and exploit electronic reading and sorting capabilities. from which the responses came indicates that at least 72% came from different plants. The true percentage was probably higher because some zip codes have more than one injection molding plant. On that basis, it can be said that the responses came from at least 1167 plants, or 25% of the total surveyed. Those plants represent about 15% of all injection molding facilities in the U.S. and Canada Canada (kăn`ədə), independent nation (2001 pop. 30,007,094), 3,851,787 sq mi (9,976,128 sq km), N North America. Canada occupies all of North America N of the United States (and E of Alaska) except for Greenland and the French islands of . By several measures, the responses are highly representative of the population surveyed. The average number of machines per plant was 12, as compared with 11.5 for all plants in the U.S. and Canada. A little over 65% of respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy. were at plants performing custom molding, compared TABULAR tab·u·lar adj. 1. Having a plane surface; flat. 2. Organized as a table or list. 3. Calculated by means of a table. tabular resembling a table. DATA OMITTED with 67% for all injection plants. Geographical distribution the natural arrangements of animals and plants in particular regions or districts. See under Distribution. See also: Distribution Geographic of respondents was also quite close to the national distribution of molding plants. Eighty-one percent of respondents came from two primary job functions: production or manufacturing engineering Manufacturing engineering Engineering activities involved in the creation and operation of the technical and economic processes that convert raw materials, energy, and purchased items into components for sale to other manufacturers or into end products for (49%) and general or corporate management (32%). Mother 14% of respondents came from R&D, quality assurance, and design or design engineering. These proportions closely match those of our total injection molding readership read·er·ship n. 1. The readers of a publication considered as a group. 2. Chiefly British The office of a reader at a university. . Likewise, the distribution of job rifles closely matches the profile of readers surveyed.
TABLE 2--SMALL INJECTION MACHINES (0-99 TONS) PURCHASED NEW IN 1988-93 714
RESPONSES
No. of No. of
Supplier Mentions Supplier Mentions
Arburg 163 MCP 6
Autojectors 14 Meiki 5
Bata Engineering 1 Mitsubishi 2
Boston Matthews 2 Multipas 1
Boy 96 Nan Rong 1
Bucher 3 Negri Bossi 5
Butler 1 Netstal 6
Cincinnati Milacron 110 Newbury 36
CLF 1 Nigata 4
Continental 1 Nissei 57
Corval 1 Noble 1
Dong Shin 2 Orient 1
Elite 1 PH Trueblood 8
Engel 99 Plastak Eng. 2
Excel 1 Plastimac 1
Fong Kee 2 Sadamel 1
Gluco 6 Sandretto 7
Hatoge 1 Shinwa Seiki 9
HPM 9 Simplomatic 1
Hunter 1 Sumitomo 6
Husky 1 Tat Ming 2
Illinois Precision 4 TMC(a) 14
Jaco 8 Toolex-Alpha 1
JSW 5 Toshiba 22
Kawaguchi 16 Toyo 30
Klockner 5 Van Dorn 98
Krauss-Maffei 2 Vimm 2
Lucky-Goldstar 1 Welltec 1
Mannesmann Demag 6
a One was built for the Rochester label by TMC.
Of the 714 respondents who provided the machine and supplier quality ratings, 92.5% said they were "closely involved" in the operation of injection machines (74% commonly and 18.5% occasionally). And 81% were closely involved in maintenance of injection machines (50% commonly, 31% occasionally). Only 7% said they were "rarely or never" involved in either activity. Of those 714 respondents, 81% said they were involved in the purchase of injection machines during the last five years: 60% were involved in determining the need for a new machine; 58% in selecting the type of machine; 57% in recommending or selecting a supplier; and 41% in approving the purchase. WHAT'S MOST IMPORTANT? Before being asked to provide quality ratings on their machines and suppliers, respondents were asked to name their first, second and third most important criteria criteria (krītēr´ē n. for choosing a small injection machine. In each case, certain responses were clear favorites Another term for bookmarks, which was popularized by Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser. See favicon and Internet Explorer. . * "Most important": Two responses were closely tied - uptime The time during which a system is working without failure. Contrast with downtime. See availability. reliability (including dependability dependability - software reliability , durability du·ra·ble adj. 1. Capable of withstanding wear and tear or decay: a durable fabric. 2. and low maintenance) and machine precision/accuracy/repeatability. * "Second most important": Again, there was a close tie, this time between uptime reliability and quality/availability of spare parts Spare parts, also referred to as Service Parts is a term used to indicate extra parts available and in proximity to the mechanical item, such as a automobile, boat, engine, for which they might be used. Spare parts are also called “spares. , service, after-sale support. * "Third most important": Here, price was the resounding re·sound v. re·sound·ed, re·sound·ing, re·sounds v.intr. 1. To be filled with sound; reverberate: The schoolyard resounded with the laughter of children. 2. winner. Taken all together, which criteria appeared most commonly anywhere in respondents' lists of 'Three Most Important"? * Uptime reliability and price were each cited among the key criteria by 42% of respondents. * Spare parts/service/support appeared in the top three criteria of 30% of respondents, as did machine precision/accuracy/repeatability. * Ease of use/mold setup/mold change came third, cited by 13% of respondents. * Matching basic machine capabilities to the job came fourth (14% of respondents). * Controls quality/ease of use came fifth (13.5% of respondents). EVALUATING THE RATINGS Table 2 lists 59 brands of small injection machines that respondents purchased new from 1988 to 1993. Respondents were asked to rate 31 quality characteristics of machine performance and supplier service as Excellent, Good, Acceptable/Nothing Special, Somewhat Unsatisfactory, or Very Unsatisfactory. These were reduced to numerical numerical expressed in numbers, i.e. Arabic numerals of 0 to 9 inclusive. numerical nomenclature a numerical code is used to indicate the words, or other alphabetical signals, intended. averages by counting each Excellent equal to 5 and Very Unsatisfactory equal to 1. TABULAR DATA OMITTED
TABLE--'WOULD YOU BUY ANOTHER SMALL MACHINE FROM THAT SUPPLIER?' (10 or More
Mentions)
No. of
Supplier Mentions(a) Yes No
Arburg 170 88% 12%
Autojectors 17 100%
Battenfeld 35 63% 37%
Boy 94 73% 27%
Cincinnati Milacron 107 87% 13%
Engel 111 85% 15%
Kawaguchi 14 79% 21%
Newbury 33 70% 30%
Nissei 54 93% 7%
TMC 14 50% 50%
Toshiba 21 86% 14%
Toyo 28 89% 11%
Van Dorn 96 64% 36%
All Machines 918 80% 20%
a Does not include 5% No Answer.
TABLE 5--'WOULD YOU BUY ANOTHER SMALL MACHINE FROM THAT SUPPLIER?' (3 to 9
Mentions)
No. of
Supplier Mentions(a) Yes No
Bucher 3 100%
FCS 3 100%
Gluco 6 67% 33%
HPM 7 71% 29%
Illinois Precision 4 75% 25%
Jaco 7 57% 43%
JSW 5 80% 20%
Klockner 5 80% 20%
Mannesmann Demag 5 100%
MCP 6 67% 33%
Meiki 5 80% 20%
Mitsubishi 9 78% 22%
Negri Bossi 5 40% 60%
Netstal 6 83% 17%
Niigata 4 100%
PH Trueblood 7 100%
Sandretto 7 71% 29%
Shinwa Seiki 9 89% 11%
Sumitomo 6 100%
a Does not include 5% No Answer.
TABLE 6--JOB TITLES OF RESPONDENTS
% of
Title Respondents
Chief Exec.
(CEO, Pres., General Mgr.) 25.4
Miscellaneous V.P. 4.2
Head of Manufacturing
(Plant Mgr., Production)
or Manufacturing Mgr.) 18.2
Middle/Lower Mfg. Management
(Shift Supervisor, Foreman) 7.0
Head of Engineering 5.8
Manufacturing Engineer 16.8
Manufacturing Technician 2.2
Tooling 4.0
Maintenance 0.9
Technical Service 0.8
Quality Assurance 3.2
R&D 5.4
Scheduling & Purchasing 1.1
Product Design & Devel. 3.1
Consultant 0.4
Marketing, Sales 0.4
Other & No Answer 1.5
These results are presented in Tables i and 3. Table 1 includes results for all machine brands that received ratings from 10 or more respondents. Table 3 contains machine brands that received three to nine ratings. These are tabulated separately because the smaller number of responses indicates that these results should be interpreted with a greater degree of caution. With so few responses, only one more or one less could have significantly affected the ratings averages. Where a brand was rated by only one or two molders, we judged the results to be too unreliable to report at all. To ease comprehension comprehension Act of or capacity for grasping with the intellect. The term is most often used in connection with tests of reading skills and language abilities, though other abilities (e.g., mathematical reasoning) may also be examined. of the mass of data in Table 1, we graphed the results for eight quality characteristics that correspond to the machine-selection criteria deemed most important by molders. All machine brands received average ratings of'"Acceptable" or better in a majority of categories. The ratings on machine energy efficiency should perhaps be taken with a grain of salt, since only 36% of respondents said their plant had measured or analyzed an·a·lyze tr.v. an·a·lyzed, an·a·lyz·ing, an·a·lyz·es 1. To examine methodically by separating into parts and studying their interrelations. 2. Chemistry To make a chemical analysis of. 3. the energy consumption of its injection machines. By contrast, 86% said their plants perform routine scheduled maintenance on their machines, lending greater credence to answers on maintainability and uptime. The ratings generally corroborate To support or enhance the believability of a fact or assertion by the presentation of additional information that confirms the truthfulness of the item. The testimony of a witness is corroborated if subsequent evidence, such as a coroner's report or the testimony of other the results of a more general injection-machine quality survey we published last year (see PT, Nov. '92, p. 40). Among those respondents were 265 users of small machines. Both surveys found highest ratings for Japanese Japanese (jăp'ənēz`), language of uncertain origin that is spoken by more than 125 million people, most of whom live in Japan. There are also many speakers of Japanese in the Ryukyu Islands, Korea, Taiwan, parts of the United States, and small machines as a group, and second-highest ratings for German/Austrian/Swiss models, in most quality characteristics. However, the latest survey shows significant distinctions between different brands of Japanese, German or North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. machines. In fact, U.S.-built presses often appear among the top-rated models. It may be noted that the number of mentions of hydraulic-clamp machines exceeded those of toggle To alternate back and forth between two states. toggle - To change a bit from whatever state it is in to the other state; to change from 1 to 0 or from 0 to 1. This comes from "toggle switches", such as standard light switches, though the word "toggle" actually refers to presses by only 13%. And the ratings in all machine performance categories were virtually identical for both clamp types. When asked what they would most like to see improved in the small machines they use, respondents answered overwhelmingly that they desired improvements in controls-whether improved effectiveness, greater ease of use, a more convenient location, or added features. The second most frequently cited area for improvements was supplier technical service, spare parts, repairs, and support. Clamp-system improvements came a dose third, followed by hydraulic-system improvements (especially oil leaks) and injection-system improvements. Rounding out the top ten were ease of use/setup/mold change, safety and noise (including mold mold, name for certain multicellular organisms of the various classes of the kingdom Fungi, characteristically having bodies composed of a cottony mycelium. The colors of molds are caused by the spores, which are borne on the mycelium. safety), ejector ejector (ijekt n by common usage, a device used to remove debris and fluids by negative pressure. Another term is aspirator. See also aspirator. or knockout system improvements, and better manuals or documentation (in English 1. English - (Obsolete) The source code for a program, which may be in any language, as opposed to the linkable or executable binary produced from it by a compiler. The idea behind the term is that to a real hacker, a program written in his favourite programming language is !). WHEN ALL IS SAID AND DONE Finally, when asked if they would buy a small machine from their suppliers again, respondents gave the highest percentage of yes answers to Japanese machines as a group. German/Austrian/Swiss machines came in second. Among individual brands, however, a U.S. nameplate was number one among the most popular makes. Note that on these tables, some brands have more mentions than there were respondents because hydraulic and toggle machines from the same supplier were rated separately. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion