7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (2024)

Table of Contents

Introduction & Why use the 7 QC Tools?

The 7 QC tools help to analyze the data and are most helpful in problem-solving methods. It is the fundamental tool to improve our product and process quality by identifying and analyzing the problems.

7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (1)

As per the Deming chain to achieve the organizational goal, we must tackle the product & process-related problems, and analyze these problems we get help from 7 QC tools. These 7 QC tools give us the analytical and statistical competence to solve the problems.

What are 7 QC tools?

7 Basic Quality techniques

  1. Pareto Charts
  2. Cause and Effect Diagrams
  3. Histograms
  4. Check sheet
  5. Scatter Diagrams
  6. Control Charts
  7. Flow Charts

Pareto Chart

Purpose:

  • Prioritize problems.
  • Pareto Charts are used to apply the 80/20 rule of Joseph Juran which states that 80% of the problems are the result of 20% of the problems. A Pareto Chart can be used to identify 20% of route causes of problems.

How is it done?

  • Create a preliminary list of problem classifications.
  • Tally the occurrences in each problem classification.
  • Arrange each classification in order from highest to lowest
  • Construct the bar chart
7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (2)

Benefits:

  • Pareto analysis helps graphically display results so the significant few problems emerge from the general background
  • It tells you what to work on first

To know the detail of What Pareto Principle is?, How to Make Pareto in Excel?

Purpose:

  • Graphical representation of the trial leading to the root cause of a problem
  • It’s a diagram that demonstrates the relationship between Effects and the categories of their causes
  • The Arrangement of the Diagram lets it look like a fishbone it is therefore also called a fish-bone diagram

How is it done?

  • Decide which quality characteristic, outcome, or effect you want to examine (may use a Pareto chart)
  • Backbone –draw a straight line
  • Ribs – categories
  • Medium-size bones –secondary causes
  • Small bones – root causes
7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (3)

Benefits:

  • Breaks problems down into bite-size pieces to find the root cause
  • Fosters teamwork
  • A common understanding of the factors causing the problem
  • Road map to verify picture of the process
  • Follows brainstorming relationship

To learn in detail How to create a cause and effect diagram (Fishbone diagram)?

Histogram

Purpose:

  • A Histogram is a bar graph
  • To determine the spread or variation of a set of data points in a graphical form
  • usually used to present frequency

How is it done?

7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (4)
  • Collect data, 50-100 data point
  • Determine the range of the data
  • Calculate the size of the class interval
  • Divide data points into classes Determine the class boundary
  • Count # of data points in each class
  • Draw the histogram

Benefits:

  • Allows you to understand at a glance the variation that exists in a process
  • The shape of the histogram will show process behavior
  • Often, it will tell you to dig deeper for otherwise unseen causes of variation.
  • The shape and size of the dispersion will help identify otherwise hidden sources of variation
  • Used to determine the capability of a process
  • The starting point for the improvement process

Check Sheet

Purpose:

7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (5)
  • Tool for collecting and organizing measured or counted data
  • Data collected can be used as input data for other quality tools

Benefits:

  • Collect data in a systematic and organized manner
  • To determine the source of the problem
  • To facilitate the classification of data (stratification).

Scatter Diagram

Purpose:

  • To identify the correlations that might exist between a quality characteristic and a factor that might be driving it
  • A scatter diagram shows the correlation between two variables in a process.
  • These variables could be Critical to Quality (CTQ) characteristics and a factor affecting it two factors affecting a CTQ or two related quality characteristics.
  • Dots representing data points are scattered on the diagram.
  • The extent to which the dots cluster together in a line across the diagram shows the strength.

Benefits:

  • Decide which paired factors you want to examine. Both factors must be measurable on some incremental linear scale.
  • Collect 30 to 100 paired data points.
  • Find the highest and lowest value for both variables.
  • Draw the vertical (y) and horizontal (x) axes of a graph.
  • Plot the data
  • Title the diagram

The shape that the cluster of dots takes will tell you something about the relationship between the two variables that you tested.

7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (6)

You may occasionally get scatter diagrams that look boomerang- or banana-shaped.

7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (7)
  • To analyze the strength of the correlation, divide the scatter plot into two sections.
  • Treat each half separately in your analysis

Benefits:

  • Helps identify and test probable causes.
  • By knowing which elements of your process are related and how they are related, you will know what to control or what to vary to affect a quality characteristic.

Control Chart

Purpose:

  • The primary purpose of a control chart is to predict expected product outcomes.
  • Statistical tool, showing whether a process is in control or not.
  • Taking samples of a process and detecting the possibility of the process being out of control
7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (8)

How does it Work?

  • Define Upper limit, lower limit, and medium value
  • Draw Chart.
  • Gather values and draw them into the chart

Benefits:

  • Predict process out of control and out of specification limits
  • Distinguish between specific, identifiable causes of variation
  • Can be used for statistical process control
Strategy for eliminating assignable-cause variation:
  • Get timely data so that you see the effect of the assignable cause soon after it occurs.
  • As soon as you see something that indicates that an assignable cause of variation has happened, search for the cause.
  • Change tools to compensate for the assignable cause.
Strategy for reducing common-cause variation:
  • Do not attempt to explain the difference between any of the values or data points produced by a stable system in control.
  • Reducing common-cause variation usually requires making fundamental changes in your process

Flow Chart

Purpose:

  • Visual illustration of the sequence of operations required to complete a task.
  • Schematic drawing of the process to measure or improve.
  • The starting point for process improvement
  • A potential weakness in the process is made visual.
  • Picture the process as it should be.
  • Way of representing a Procedure using simple symbols and arrows

How is it done?

  • List major steps
  • Write the process step inside each symbol
  • Connect the Symbols with arrows showing the direction of the flow
  • List sub-steps under each in the order they occur
7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (9)

Benefits:

  • Identify process improvements
  • Understand the process
  • Shows duplicated effort and other non-value-added steps
  • Clarify working relationships between people and organizations
  • Target specific steps in the process for improvement.
  • Simplest of all flowcharts
  • Used for planning new processes or examining an existing one
  • Keep people focused on the whole process
  • Show what happens at each step in the process
  • Show what happens when non-standard events occur
  • Graphically display processes to identify redundancies and other wasted efforts

Benefits of all – Tool-wise

7 QC Tools - Quality Engineer Stuff (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nathanial Hackett

Last Updated:

Views: 5507

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (52 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nathanial Hackett

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: Apt. 935 264 Abshire Canyon, South Nerissachester, NM 01800

Phone: +9752624861224

Job: Forward Technology Assistant

Hobby: Listening to music, Shopping, Vacation, Baton twirling, Flower arranging, Blacksmithing, Do it yourself

Introduction: My name is Nathanial Hackett, I am a lovely, curious, smiling, lively, thoughtful, courageous, lively person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.