摘要

The aim of this case study was to (1) investigate differences in mechanical exposure (i.e. mechanical forces arising in the body of the operator) between two production strategies: long-cycle parallelised flow assembly (OLD) and conventional serial flow assembly (NEW), and (2) estimate potential changes in job exposure as a consequence of waste reduction when rationalising a line system. %26lt;br%26gt;Data on postures, movements and whole body exposure were collected during an ordinary working shift, by means of video recordings synchronised to direct technical measurements of six professional operators. %26lt;br%26gt;The results revealed the machine paced NEW system to have slower movements with less time spent in movements of high velocity compared to the self-paced OLD system. No significant differences were found between time-median posture levels. %26apos;Disturbances%26apos; in the NEW system offered lower mechanical risk exposures compared to direct assembly work. Modelling the removal of wasteful %26apos;disturbances%26apos; revealed both an increase in risk-implying fast movements and decrease in recovery-implying periods at low velocity - effectively isolating a work intensification. This study helps expose the complex relationship between rationalizations and mechanical exposure for system operators.

  • 出版日期2012-11