bpope228
Materials
- Jun 24, 2015
- 2
Hello,
I am trying to test the repeatability of a new instrument. I am not doing a full on Gage R&R because I'm only testing with 1 operator. This may sound weird to some, but I don't think the operator matters when it comes to this test. This instrument measures surface area of powders. The operator weighs out a certain amount and adds it to a tube. He/she then screws that tube into a port, shuts the door, and presses START in the program. The instrument then does the rest. The only variable that I can think of that the operator could effect would be how tight he/she fastens the tube. I don't think this varies much anyways.
Three samples can be measured at once on this machine. So, I weighed out 3 samples and repeated the tests over and over again; 15 times. So my data consists of 3 samples with 15 measurements each. I plotted them in Excel in SPC form for viewing with upper and lower spec limits. I can tell that each port behaved a bit differently. I calculated variance, st dev, and the coefficient of variance for each. I'd like to know if there is another more concrete method for my test. I'm very familiar with gage r&r's but not so much with this method using only 1 operator.
It really isn't feasible time wise to do multiple operators, it takes 3 hours per test. Due to resources that really isn't an option. If it was I would have done it.
Can anyone help me on this? Thanks in advance.
I am trying to test the repeatability of a new instrument. I am not doing a full on Gage R&R because I'm only testing with 1 operator. This may sound weird to some, but I don't think the operator matters when it comes to this test. This instrument measures surface area of powders. The operator weighs out a certain amount and adds it to a tube. He/she then screws that tube into a port, shuts the door, and presses START in the program. The instrument then does the rest. The only variable that I can think of that the operator could effect would be how tight he/she fastens the tube. I don't think this varies much anyways.
Three samples can be measured at once on this machine. So, I weighed out 3 samples and repeated the tests over and over again; 15 times. So my data consists of 3 samples with 15 measurements each. I plotted them in Excel in SPC form for viewing with upper and lower spec limits. I can tell that each port behaved a bit differently. I calculated variance, st dev, and the coefficient of variance for each. I'd like to know if there is another more concrete method for my test. I'm very familiar with gage r&r's but not so much with this method using only 1 operator.
It really isn't feasible time wise to do multiple operators, it takes 3 hours per test. Due to resources that really isn't an option. If it was I would have done it.
Can anyone help me on this? Thanks in advance.