The Early History of Lean Manufacturing
by Jim
Cammarano, President
The early history of lean manufacturing is often
overlooked or misstated in books and articles on the subject. In
fact it is longer and more interesting than usually presented. It
all began in 1765 with a French general Jean-Baptist Gribeauval
coming to the realization that the use of interchangeable parts in
the manufacture of firearms would be a great advantage in repairing
the arms in the field. Before that time, firearms were handcrafted
piece by piece. Even in firearms produced by the same gunsmith, the
parts had to be hand fitted together. This resulted in firearms which had
parts that were unique to that particular rifle or pistol. The French were
not able to actualize the vision of interchangable parts, indeed no
country was able to in large quantities for 100 years. In 1785, Thomas
Jefferson was the American minister to France and heard of this new
concept and reported it to his superiors.
Eli Whitney in 1798, in
order to get a governmental firearms contract promised that his parts
would be interchangable unlike his competitors. His promises were
newsworthy and spread the concept widely. Unfortunately he delivered
the firearms 9 years late and failed to produce arms with the much touted
interchangable parts.
In 1813 Simeon North was contacted by the
U.S. Government to manufacture pistols with interchangeable parts.
However, his substantial cost overruns and time delays led to his efforts
being curtailed in 1816. Out of the 20,000 pistols he contracted
for, only a few hundred with interchangable parts were ever
produced.
John H. Hall in 1815 was selected to produce 100 breech
loading rifles with interchangeable parts for the
U.S.
government. Unlike his processors he delivered the rifles in 1817,
with completely interchangeable parts. This feat required him to design
and manufacture new machine tools. He also recognized the
requirement for gages and fixtures in the manufacturing process to
maintain strict conformity of his parts. In 1819 the government recognized
the superiority of his firearms and granted him an additional 1,000
rifles. Perhaps because of the monies lost with Eli Whitney and
SImeon North, the government offered him a salary and a commission of
$1.00 per rifle. The government would finance the manufacturing at
the Harpers Ferry Armory. Hall delivered the rifles in 1824 and the
government audited them and determined they indeed had met their
specifications.
Elisha Root worked at Colt Firearms and conceived
and implemented a flexible assembly line process enabling them to produce
several models of firearms with the same machinery. They used
rudimentary gages; however their parts were not interchangeable.
However the improvements made to the process and machinery resulted in the
production over 200,000 units of the model 1860 revolver alone from
1860-1873.
In 1908-1913 Henry Ford went from producing 6,000 cars
a year to 200,000 mastering both mass production, interchangeability of
parts and many of the traits that we associate with Lean Manufacturing
today including continuous thru put, short cycle times, high quality
and costs that continued to decrease. Indeed from 1908-1916
Ford's process improvements allowed him to reduce the price of a
model "T" from $850.00 to $360.00. He is the true father of modern
Lean Manufacturing.