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Quality control analysis in tofu production using Lean Six Sigma and Design of Experiments to reduce defects Ridwan, Asep; Trenggonowati, Dyah Lintang; Nur'aini, Nur'aini
Journal Industrial Servicess Vol 10, No 2 (2024): October 2024
Publisher : Universitas Sultan Ageng Tirtayasa

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62870/jiss.v10i2.29642

Abstract

This research focuses on the quality issues faced by a micro, small, and medium enterprise (MSME) in the food sector, specifically in tofu production. The production process still generates defective products, with a defect rate of 2% to 3% per day. Further observations identified several types of waste in the production process, including overproduction, defects, motion, waiting, transportation, and overprocessing, with defects being the most dominant. To address this issue, this study applies to the Lean Six Sigma method to control product quality. Through analysis using a questionnaire on the seven types of waste, five Critical to Quality (CTQ) factors were identified: dirty defects, splitting defects, hole defects, size defects, and color defects. The study also analyzes the production cycle time, revealing a lead time of 9 hours and 50 minutes, with a total value-added time of 7 hours and 49 minutes. The Defects Per Million Opportunities (DPMO) value is 5,605.31, and the sigma value is 4.0364, indicating that product quality is at an average industry level. An improvement plan was formulated using an experimental design. The proposed improvements were implemented by setting the soybean soaking time to 4 hours, the boiling time to 30 minutes, and the coloring time to 2 hours. After implementation, the percentage of defective tofu products decreased from 2.13% to 0.32%. These results demonstrate that applying the Lean Six Sigma method significantly enhances product quality and production efficiency for the MSME.