System och komponenter i en lastvagn
Report, 1990

Consumer report for the company in question (the Volvo Automobile Company) which was financed by the company and partly also by a research foundation. It is a matter of a work that in this particular case were carried out during nine years in a number of experimental workshops located outside the Chalmers University of Technology. This report has been validated by Volvo expertise at the Volo Torslanda plant (the content in this report represent extensive work from the author's side).

These workshops were financed by the Volvo Automobile and Truck companies. This achievement, as the final contribution to the Swedish automotive industry after having already treated this research field/problem area for more than two decades before this particular period if time (involving several junior and senior research competencies, as well as industrial and governmental foundings).

Specifically, this publication explains in one particular perspective how the authors dealt with the product architecture and product variation of the automotive products disassembled, which proved to necessary to be carried out in one of the experimental workshops (FOOTNOTE 1). Besides of making the product architecture and product variation understandable for the parties involved (operators as well as practitioners), was the functions of the automotive products just as important to grasp.

Especially so with regard to if such (product) functions was something that was or gradually become evident during the assembly work, or alternatively if this was impossible to understand. In the latter case, such as chassis settings (that eventually to some extent would be possible to grasp), or many marketed-oriented codes (that are extremely difficult to decode) (several complete automobiles and one heavy truck chassis were disassembled combined with having product data accessible in form of paper print-outs as well as by appropriate computer connections to the two Volvo companies etc. as well as other publication that dealt with automotive matters from the Volvo or from other sources).

FOOTNOTE 1: See a conference contribution from 1992 that also is registered and available as o PDF-document at Chalmers Public Library (CPL) (a self-developed method found out together with a junior research competency from the School of Architecture at Chalmers).

work organisation

assembly work

materials feeding techniques

Volvo Truck Company

learning and training

manufacturing technology

work structuring

engineering of psychological aspects

long work cycle times

alternatives to line assembly

ergonomics

restructuring of information systems

autonomous workgroups

Author

Tomas Engström

Department of Transportation and Logistics

Subject Categories

Other Engineering and Technologies not elsewhere specified

More information

Latest update

8/27/2018