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Techniques of Apparel Production Engineering

The tools and techniques of apparel production engineering aim at improving productivity by optimum utilization of plant resources, i.e., men, materials, and methods. The various tools and techniques of apparel production engineering are:

Method analysis
The procedure of studying methods used to determine the best way of job. The apparel engineer studies not only the way in which the operator handles the work, but also the machines used, the layout of the workstation and the work aids used. The whole purpose of a method analysis is to find a better way to do a job.

Time study
This is the most common technique used by an engineer to set targets. It helps in setting and developing standards in terms of allowed time to produce a certain number of units in a normal workday.

Capacity studies and strength analysis
A capacity study is similar to a time study but here it is done to find the operators level of performance. This can be combined with a strength analysis, to determine the wastage of potential we are having, not only with one operator, but also with a line, batch or factory.

Follow-up study
A follow-up study is a means of measuring exactly what is happening performance-wise to an individual operator or a group of operators. In making the follow-up study, the engineer records operator performance and also measures any delays that hamper performance.

Bundle diagnosis
This is a tool used to determine the specific areas where the operators are weak or strong, to focus the effort of training in those particular areas in which she is not at the required level. It measures the performance of the operator at every stage during the performance.

Incentive plans
The development of a fair incentive plan for operators is a basic function of an apparel engineer. The most common form is a straight piecework system, where the operator’s pay is based entirely on what the operator produces. There are cases, however, where such a plan might not be fair to the operator. For example, utility operator’s performance in each operation would not be high due to frequent changes. For this reason, various types of split incentive plans can be used. Most operators can master the simple arithmetic processes of applying any wage incentive formula.

Drill training
Many companies place their operator training programs under the engineering function, especially when some form of drill training is used. This is a system in which particular jobs to be taught are analyzed and broken down into job parts. The operator learns the job of one part at a time, and this enables her to learn faster than if she tries to learn the whole job at once. It is basically based in learning the different skills required to perform one complete operation.

Statistical quality control
SQC is a means of sample inspection that is designed to measure and control quality without having to inspect each and every unit produced.

Scheduling systems

Engineers are becoming more and more involved with the development of systematic approaches to production scheduling and work process control.