Transonic Systems Inc. is the worldwide industry leader in the manufacture and marketing of biomedical flow measurement devices. Its biomedical products measure and confirm liquid flow during surgery, post-surgery, hemodialysis and in research studies.
The Company was founded in 1983 by Cornelius Drost, who as a Sr. Research Associate at the NYS College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell University invented the transit-time ultrasound flowmeter. Transonic measurement superiority was quickly recognized and, in less than a decade, scientific literature cited Transonic transit-time ultrasound as the “Gold Standard” against which other technologies were validated. The first transit-time ultrasound flowprobes measured volume flow in vessels in large animals such as the sheep. Flowprobes have now become so small that scientists can measure the volume of flow through hair-sized renal/femoral arteries in mice.
Over the years Transonic has expanded its product lines into a broad spectrum of applications. Cardiac surgeons use Transonic to check flow in their bypass grafts. Neurosurgeons use Transonic to avoid intraoperative strokes during aneurysm or bypass surgeries. Transplant surgeons rely on Transonic measurements to check their work. In dialysis units Transonic Hemodialysis Monitors help improve dialysis delivery. Transonic measurements are integral in ground-breaking research that leads to medical advances such as the artificial heart. Transonic devices are also used in bioprocess control, and as “Transonic inside” original equipment devices. From the laboratory to the operating room, Transonic Systems provides accurate, intuitive, and reliable tools to measure flow.
Customer service, sales, marketing, R&D, finance, administration and manufacturing are based at the Company’s 33,000 square-foot headquarters in Ithaca, NY. European and Asian divisions in the Netherlands, Taiwan and Japan augment the worldwide marketing and distribution of Transonic products.
For more information visit www.transonic.com
See this and other newsletter articles at http://amt-mep.org/files/8913/8365/8626/2013-11.pdf
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Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Associates’ Corner - Kennedy Valve
Kennedy Valve began operations when Daniel Kennedy started making gate valves in 1877 on Gold Street in Lower Manhattan. After one relocation to Coxsackie, the company moved to Elmira in 1907.
Decades of steady growth included one significant boost during World War II when the Maritime Commission awarded three contracts to the company to manufacture eight million valves for the Victory Fleet.
Now occupying a 52-acre site, Kennedy Valve is today a full-line waterworks valve and hydrant manufacturer, supplying resilient seated gate valves, fire hydrants, check valves, butterfly valves, indicator posts, grooved butterfly valves and an assortment of related products that are distributed worldwide.
In 1988, the company was purchased by McWane, Inc. of Birmingham, AL., and in 2007 celebrated the milestone of 100 years of operations in Elmira. Approximately 400 people are employed at Kennedy Valve and annual sales are in excess of $125 million.
In addition to providing jobs and products for its customers, Kennedy Valve management emphasizes that the company believes another important role is to be a good corporate neighbor by supporting initiatives that give value to the community. For example, the company has a Community Advisory Panel that enables a cross-section of community representatives to work with company stakeholders on issues that impact their environmental, social and economic interests. In addition to company representatives, panel members typically include local community leaders, public officials, educators, union members, regulators, members of the clergy, residents and business leaders.
Over the years, Kennedy Valve team members have helped build playgrounds and houses in partnership with Habitat for Humanity and worked to clean up local neighborhoods. Employees have participated in fundraising walks for charitable and non-profit organizations, and volunteered their time and talents for endeavors supporting the arts, education, resources for children, and senior citizen facilities.
Since 1997, McWane has invested over $32 million in capital improvement projects at the Elmira facility to make its production processes safer, environmentally sound, and more productive. With assistance from AM&T, in 2011 Kennedy Valve received ISO 9001:2008 certification.
One result of the continuous improvement efforts at the company is that a company product line that had been produced in Thailand was brought back to the US last spring. The products re-shored by Kennedy Valve are Rotating Disc Gate Valves that range in size from 3” to 72”, and were originally designed and produced in this region in the early 1900’s, but eventually production was moved offshore.
“Our lean manufacturing accomplishments here have enabled us to free up capacity so that we can take on that business without having to purchase new equipment and build new space” said Lisa Rawcliffe, the company’s lean manager.
For more information visit www.kennedyvalve.com
See this and other newsletter articles at http://amt-mep.org/files/8913/8365/8626/2013-11.pdf
Visit our website at http://www.amt-mep.org
Decades of steady growth included one significant boost during World War II when the Maritime Commission awarded three contracts to the company to manufacture eight million valves for the Victory Fleet.
Now occupying a 52-acre site, Kennedy Valve is today a full-line waterworks valve and hydrant manufacturer, supplying resilient seated gate valves, fire hydrants, check valves, butterfly valves, indicator posts, grooved butterfly valves and an assortment of related products that are distributed worldwide.
In 1988, the company was purchased by McWane, Inc. of Birmingham, AL., and in 2007 celebrated the milestone of 100 years of operations in Elmira. Approximately 400 people are employed at Kennedy Valve and annual sales are in excess of $125 million.
In addition to providing jobs and products for its customers, Kennedy Valve management emphasizes that the company believes another important role is to be a good corporate neighbor by supporting initiatives that give value to the community. For example, the company has a Community Advisory Panel that enables a cross-section of community representatives to work with company stakeholders on issues that impact their environmental, social and economic interests. In addition to company representatives, panel members typically include local community leaders, public officials, educators, union members, regulators, members of the clergy, residents and business leaders.
Over the years, Kennedy Valve team members have helped build playgrounds and houses in partnership with Habitat for Humanity and worked to clean up local neighborhoods. Employees have participated in fundraising walks for charitable and non-profit organizations, and volunteered their time and talents for endeavors supporting the arts, education, resources for children, and senior citizen facilities.
Since 1997, McWane has invested over $32 million in capital improvement projects at the Elmira facility to make its production processes safer, environmentally sound, and more productive. With assistance from AM&T, in 2011 Kennedy Valve received ISO 9001:2008 certification.
One result of the continuous improvement efforts at the company is that a company product line that had been produced in Thailand was brought back to the US last spring. The products re-shored by Kennedy Valve are Rotating Disc Gate Valves that range in size from 3” to 72”, and were originally designed and produced in this region in the early 1900’s, but eventually production was moved offshore.
“Our lean manufacturing accomplishments here have enabled us to free up capacity so that we can take on that business without having to purchase new equipment and build new space” said Lisa Rawcliffe, the company’s lean manager.
For more information visit www.kennedyvalve.com
See this and other newsletter articles at http://amt-mep.org/files/8913/8365/8626/2013-11.pdf
Visit our website at http://www.amt-mep.org
Driving to Zero Defects "8 Step Quality Defect Reduction Method"
HOST COMPANY: The Raymond Corporation
The company was founded in 1922 and is based in Greene, NY. It has manufacturing sites in Greene, NY and Muscatine, IA, and a parts distribution facility located in Syracuse, NY.
WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
PARTICIPANT BENEFITS
Workshop Objectives:
The workshop will be facilitated by Scott Campbell, TPS Manager at The Raymond Corporation and Carol Miller, Principal Consultant at AM&T.
See this and other newsletter articles at http://amt-mep.org/files/8913/8365/8626/2013-11.pdf
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The Raymond Corporation, a Toyota Industries (TICO) member company is a global provider of materials handling equipment, technology, expertise, and support. Raymond manufactures electric lift truck products for the narrow aisle and very narrow aisle market segments in Class I, II, and III (Counterbalanced, Narrow Aisle, Pallet Truck).
WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
Raymond will provide a tour of its manufacturing operations highlighting how it has applied the Toyota Production System (TPS) Principles and Tools.
In the afternoon, Raymond will review its 8-step method for reducing quality defects, including how each step is performed and its key points. A critical part of this method is Raymond’s daily morning market or Asaichi meeting, which will also be highlighted during the workshop.
Asaichi morning meetings are used to communicate problems, share countermeasures, and speed overall resolution. Since every problem is an opportunity for improvement, this process helps leader’s and associates understand that quality is everyone’s responsibility.
WHO SHOULD ATTEND
Any level of the organization from front line Team Leader to CEO.
Individuals and teams encompassing a cross section of your company.
PARTICIPANT BENEFITS
- Gain an understanding of how to effectively reduce quality defects.
- How Asaichi meetings work.
- The benefits of Asaichi morning meetings.
- How to engage all team members and departments and be part of the solution.
COURSE AGENDA
8:00 to 8:30 am: Registration and welcome
8:30 to 9:30 am: Overview of The Raymond Corporation
9:30 to 11:00 am: Tour of The Raymond Corporation
11:00 to 11:30 am: Q&A
11:30 to 12:00 pm: Lunch (provided)
12:00 to 3:30 pm: Driving to Zero Defects
3:30 to 4:00 pm: Wrap-up
- Review 8-step method for reducing quality defects
- Review asaichi meeting roles, format and process
See this and other newsletter articles at http://amt-mep.org/files/8913/8365/8626/2013-11.pdf
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Strategic Thinking Exercises – 6 Best Characteristics
By Mike Brown
Visit our website at http://www.amt-mep.org
What are the characteristics of the best strategic thinking exercises?
They all need to:
- Allow everyone to participate – even those with little or no direct experience.
Some people who participate in strategic planning will have less experience than other participants will. Great exercises, however, accommodate these differences in experience and do not leave anyone without a role based on what they know or have done. - Incorporate emotion.
It does not necessarily matter which emotion strategic thinking exercises incorporate. It could be fear, angst, frustration, humor, hope, or passion. Or another emotion. Or some combination of all of those. If your strategy development only depends on logic and does not incorporate emotion, you are missing something. - Require people to think atypically.
If everyone comes into and leaves a set of strategic thinking exercises without having thought in new ways, there is a major disconnect. There needs to be specific variables built in to ensure people are thinking along new paths and in ways they have not had to consider previously. - Introduce a strategic twist that doesn’t match expectations or reality.
If you want different perspectives from your current strategy, strategy and brainstorming questions need to go beyond simply what the current situation looks like. They should incorporate an unexpected twist or thinking detour to make participants feel uncomfortable with their standard way of thinking. - Create new questions.
The more you attempt to answer strategy and brainstorming questions, the more new questions will emerge. Strategic thinking is about exploration. If it’s fruitful exploration, you’re going to uncover strategic paths that will be laden with new questions. - Leave room for unanswered issues.
This goes along with triggering new questions. Successful strategic thinking exercises can’t be expected to answer everything. The future isn’t certain. The objective should be to consider as many possibilities as possible, even if some, or even many of them, can’t be completely answered right away.
- Doing the Opposite of Competitors’ Bad Practices
- Using Analogies to Think about Your Strategy
- Disruptive Innovation Possibilities
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Different Words
A blind boy sat on the steps of a building with a hat by his feet. He held up a sign which said: “I am blind, please help.” There were only a few coins in the hat.
A man was walking by. He took a few coins from his pocket and dropped them into the hat. He then took the sign, turned it around, and wrote some words. He put the sign back so that everyone who walked by would see the new words.
Soon the hat began to fill up. A lot more people were giving money to the blind boy. That afternoon the man who had changed the sign came to see how things were.
The boy recognized his footsteps and asked, “Were you the one who changed my sign this morning?
What did you write?”
The man said, “I only wrote the truth. I said what you said but in a different way.”
What he had written was: “Today is a beautiful day and I cannot see it.”
Do you think the first sign and the second sign were saying the same thing?
Of course both signs told people the boy was blind.
But the first sign simply said the boy was blind. The second sign told people they were so lucky that they were not blind. Should we be surprised that the second sign was more effective?
Moral of the story:
Be thankful for what you have. Be creative. Be innovative. Think differently and positively.
See this and other newsletter articles at http://amt-mep.org/files/8913/8365/8626/2013-11.pdf
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Lean Benefits
By applying Lean Tools & Concepts to organizations, it is typical to realize improvements of:
The basic goal of Lean is to get more done with less by:
On their own the individual Lean Tools and Concepts will provide certain measurable benefits, but used in the right combination for your business, across the whole value stream, they will lead to more dramatic gains.
See this and other newsletter articles at http://amt-mep.org/files/8913/8365/8626/2013-11.pdf
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- 50% in productivity
- 75-100% in WIP reductions
- 75% quality improvements
- 50-75% space reductions
- 75-100% in cycle time reductions
The basic goal of Lean is to get more done with less by:
- Minimizing inventory at all stages of production
- Shortening product cycle times from raw materials to finished goods
- Eliminating waste
On their own the individual Lean Tools and Concepts will provide certain measurable benefits, but used in the right combination for your business, across the whole value stream, they will lead to more dramatic gains.
See this and other newsletter articles at http://amt-mep.org/files/8913/8365/8626/2013-11.pdf
Visit our website at http://www.amt-mep.org
Our Recent Activities to Promote Growth, Innovation and Profitability
- Worked with Binghamton University to coordinate and publicize a workshop designed to educate manufacturers about the funding opportunities and application process for the federal SBIR program.
- Partnered with SBDC & DOC on “Growth Through Exporting” Workshop.
- Completed a 5-day 5S and Visual Workplace event. The teams created a workplace where everything is visually clear and controlled. As a result, the workplace will produce fewer defects, less waste, fewer injuries, and fewer breakdowns. These improvements will translate into lower costs and improved quality.
- Completed a 5-day Set-up Reduction event. The team challenged the current process and identified opportunities for improvement. The new set-up process was designed, documented and its performance validated. The reduced set-up will result in increased equipment capacity, increase productivity and reduced inventory.
- Conducted a 4-day “order to delivery” value stream mapping event on a major product family. It is anticipated that when implemented, the plan will result in a significant improvement in quality and productivity.
- Conducted a four-hour Lean Thinking training session focused on identifying and improving production and administrative wastes. The training was attended by 8 people.
- Conducted a 5-day “order to cash” value stream mapping event on a major product family. It is anticipated that when implemented, the plan will result in a significant reduction in lead times, inventory, and floor space, and an increase in quality and productivity.
- Conducted several ISO 9001:2008 internal audits across the Region.
- Led an open workshop in Basic Project Management. Ten (10) companies attended the workshop.
- Delivered a workshop in Basic Project Management in Ithaca, NY. Twenty (20) employees participated and received certificates of attendance.
- Worked with (16) company leaders helping them assess training and capital needs and applying through the Regional Technology Councils for CFA grants to support the training and expansions.
- We worked with the AME Mid-Atlantic CNY group in hosting a Roundtable Networking event at a manufacturer in Elmira, NY to see discuss “Issues/challenges facing regional Manufacturing (CI Focus)”. This was attended by 29 people from 12 companies.
- Assisted a company in preparation for an ISO Certification Audit. Company received their certification.
Visit our website at http://www.amt-mep.org
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