Examples of Assembly Line in the following topics:
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- This was largely due to the adoption by industry
of the technique of mass production, the system under which identical products
were churned out quickly and inexpensively using assembly lines.
- Using the manufacturing assembly line system, in which individual parts or
sets of pieces are added to a product at stations on a conveyor belt or other
moveable line, entrepreneurs such
as automobile tycoon Henry Ford were able to greatly increase productivity.
- Telephone lines were strung across the continent, and indoor plumbing and
modern sewer systems were installed for the first time in many regions.
- Assembly lines revolutionized manufacturing in the first decades of the 20th Century.
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- Adjusting capacity will affect the amount of items produced on the assembly line.
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- If you think that the word ‘production' only refers to factory assembly lines, think again.
- The point here is not to think of production as pertaining only to manufacturers, but rather to assume that every system is a production line in one form or another.
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- The employment of assembly lines, which used special-purpose tools and/or equipment to allow unskilled workers to contribute to the finished product
- It is true that his assembly line was revolutionary, but it was in no way original.
- This allowed for a very adaptable flexibility, creating an assembly line that could change its constituent components to meet the needs of the product being assembled.
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- This invention, along with Eli Whitney's cotton gin, set the stage for the development of interchangeable parts and the assembly line, which would revolutionize manufacturing globally.
- The American System, or Armory System, emerged in the 1820s and involved semi-skilled labor to produce standardized and identical interchangeable parts that could be assembled with a minimum of time and skill.
- The use of interchangeable parts separated manufacture from assembly, allowing assembly to be carried out by sequentially adding parts to a product.
- The assembly line, relying on these parts, became a particularly prominent feature of manufacturing in the late 19th and 20 centuries.
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- QA includes managing the quality of raw materials, assemblies, products, components, services related to production, management processes, production processes, and inspection processes.
- Many processes, such as assembly lines, help ensure quality assurance and control by streamlining the production process.
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- Heads, arms, legs, and torsos were created separately and then assembled.
- Eight face moulds were most likely used, with clay added after assembly to provide individual facial features.
- This would classify the process as assembly line production, with specific parts manufactured and assembled after being fired, as opposed to crafting one solid piece and subsequently firing it.
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- Eliminate leaks in compressed air lines and valves.
- A General Motors assembly plant in Flint, Michigan, for example, reduced its energy needs by around 8% after, in part, decommissioning unused air supply systems and ensuring that those that remained worked properly.
- A leak in a steam line can result in higher steam production requirements to compensate for what is lost.
- In addition, leaking condensate return lines bring back less condensate to their boiler, thereby forcing the boiler to use more energy to heat up replacement water.