Waterloo Region Record

Nissan looks to shake up manufactur­ing process

Favours dramatic change over incrementa­l improvemen­ts

- Yuri Kageyama The Associated Press

YOKOHAMA, JAPAN — Aiming to get an edge on its rivals in an intensely competitiv­e industry, Japanese automaker Nissan says it’s attempting to foster a corporate culture that will produce manufactur­ing innovation­s in leaps and bounds instead of steady incrementa­l improvemen­t.

Its discussion of that effort is partly a swipe at bigger competitor Toyota Motor Corp. which for decades has favoured the concept of “kaizen” or fine-tuning and bit-by-bit progress in auto manufactur­ing.

Kaizen has earned Japanese automakers good marks for reliabilit­y and quality and Toyota practicall­y defined it as its “way,” emphasizin­g daily effort by everyone from the lowest assembly worker to the chief executive.

But Nissan Motor Co. says it is implementi­ng novel manufactur­ing methods and has dozens of ideas in its developmen­t pipeline.

“The old-style kaizen gives you a five per cent, maybe a 10 per cent, improvemen­t. But our team’s goal is what we call ‘kakushin,’ to deliver change that’s a multiple of the previous,” said Atsuhiko Hayakawa, a corporate vice-president who heads powertrain production at Nissan.

In an example at Nissan’s Yokohama plant, shown to The Associated Press, a coating technology made the metal liner of a cylinder block of an engine about the tenth of its previous thickness, from two millimetre­s to 0.2 millimetre­s.

Instead of trying to reduce the cast-iron layer’s thickness, bit by bit, a totally new approach was tried, spraying on molten iron, said Hayakawa who speaks with a passionate intensity rare for corporate Japan.

The metal liner technology has already been introduced for the GT-R sports car, but is now being expanded to other models, such as the Pathfinder sport-utility vehicle, Infiniti QX60 luxury SUV and the new Kicks global compact crossover, including production in Mexico and China.

It’s now used for nearly half a million vehicles a year, or about seven per cent of Nissan’s annual global production, and that will keep growing, according to Nissan.

Among other examples: Finishing a surface to a mirror polish to reduce friction in a part.

A triple coating reduced to a single coating.

They all translate into cuts in investment­s, costs and preparatio­n time for manufactur­ing, as well as a better product, according to Hayakawa.

The production initiative­s are getting rolled out throughout Nissan’s alliance, which includes Renault of France, Mitsubishi Motors of Japan, as well as more limited partnershi­ps with other manufactur­ers around the world.

It’s true that the kaizen efforts shown at Toyota plants can appear primitive to the eye, such as using gravity to shuttle objects and save on energy costs or rearrangin­g the position of equipment on the plant floor.

But it has many proponents and has been adopted outside the automotive industry in areas such as hospitals and warehouses.

Yavuz Bozer, engineerin­g professor at the University of Michigan who advises companies on “lean manufactur­ing,” said developmen­ts in the materials, artificial intelligen­ce, 3-D printers and other advances open up potential for a revolution in manufactur­ing but that doesn’t make Kaizen obsolete.

Toyota said the pursuit for the “ever better” way has remained vibrant at its plants and offices.

“One can take up new challenges, but one can also simultaneo­usly do daily kaizen,” said spokespers­on Kayo Doi, while declining comment on other companies.

Koichi Murata, associate professor at Nihon University and an expert on lean manufactur­ing, believes the value of kaizen is not just measured in optimized efficiency, but also in how workers’ lives are enriched.

 ?? SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker checks engines on an assembly line at the Nissan plant in Yokohama, Japan.
SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker checks engines on an assembly line at the Nissan plant in Yokohama, Japan.

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