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Industry Study INDUSTRY STUDY Technical Factors Mechanisation Specialisation Automation Mass production

Mechanisation

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Industry Study INDUSTRY STUDY Technical Factors Mechanisation Specialisation Automation Mass production. Mechanisation. Machines replacing human muscle but still requiring human control This will greatly increase efficiency, productivity and quality. Some advantages of mechanisation are : - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Mechanisation

Industry Study

INDUSTRY STUDY

Technical Factors

MechanisationSpecialisationAutomationMass production

Page 2: Mechanisation

Mechanisation

Machines replacing human muscle but still requiring human control

This will greatly increase efficiency, productivity and quality

Page 3: Mechanisation

Some advantages of mechanisation are:

• a higher volume of goods can be produced in a shorter time period

• more consistent quality of goods produced

• machines don’t tire or take holidays and will work 24 hours a day

• machines are less likely to cause accidents and lead to workers compensation claims

Page 4: Mechanisation

Some disadvantages of mechanisation are:

• the high initial cost of purchasing equipment and the cost of training workers to operate the machines.

• the loss of jobs in an industry which becomes highly mechanised

• the high cost of maintenance and repairs to machines

Page 5: Mechanisation

Specialisation

Focusing tasks on one particular skill, product, process, resource or service

Diversification:

• producing more than one product or service

• being involved in different types of businesses or industries which may or may not be related

Page 6: Mechanisation

Advantages

• workers can become efficient at their task quickly • more likely that precision can be maximised

• unskilled labour can often be utilised, reducing costs and increasing profits

Disadvantages

• workers are not multiskilled and so it is more difficult to replace sick or injured workers with another worker in the factory

• workers can become complacent due to boredom

Advantages and disadvantages of Specialisation

Page 7: Mechanisation

Automation

Machines which replace human judgment and perception, i.e. Senses

Page 8: Mechanisation

Advantages

• less labour intensive • less time spent on processing materials = cheaper • quicker to produce items

• greater quality assurance, accuracy, neatness • exact replication, maintain standard

Disadvantages

• Designs are limited due to the inflexible nature of the large panels

• Loss of fine skills • Impact on workers: air quality, noise pollution, job repetition • increased industrial waste.

Page 9: Mechanisation

Mass ProductionHigh volume production of a highly standardised product

• Typically products are made on an assembly line with workers organized to perform only one or two operations over and over again - the product moves from person to person.

• This is usually only suitable for making large volumes of goods, for example, cars clothing or other appliances.

Page 10: Mechanisation

Mass production has advantages and disadvantages. 

Some of the advantages may include:

• efficiency of production: less time is taken to produce goods

• ‘economies of scale’: cheaper to make products in large quantities

• workers only need to be trained in one or two tasks.

Page 11: Mechanisation

Disadvantages may include:

• boredom for the workers

• RSI (repetitive strain injury)

• low job satisfaction for workers

• large stock piles of finished goods waiting to be sold

• difficult to change the product’s design quickly to respond to changing styles and consumer demand