Defect and defective in Six Sigma

When working on a Six Sigma project, accurate methods to measure process performance metrics are critical for understanding the current state of a process and the value of changes made. Four of the most common measurements are Defects Per Unit (DPU), Defects per Million Opportunities (DPMO), Parts per Million Defective (PPM), and the Rolled Throughput Yield (RTY).

The following provides how each is used. However, it’s important to first understand the difference between two terms commonly used in connection with these performance measurement tools. The first is “defect.” The second is “defective.”

  • Defect: This refers to a flaw or discrepancy in an operation or on an item where more than one flaw (defect) can be found. For example, a car is one finished unit in a process. A car also contains many different areas that are assembled to create a finished vehicle. Any of these areas – the seats, the dashboard, the engine, the exhaust system, etc. – could have defects. Given that, 10 finished cars could have more than 10 defects.
  • Defective: This refers to a decision made that an item is unacceptable, typically based on an accumulation of multiple defects. Again, using the car scenario, this means that 10 cars can have a maximum 10 defective units, because each car represents one unit.

Another way to look at this is opportunity vs. units. A unit is the final product delivered to a customer. It can contain many defects and be found to be defective. Opportunities represent everything that goes into making a unit – materials, labor, delivery, etc. Each of these opportunities has the potential of having a defect.

Defects Per Unit (DPU)

DPU measures the average number of defects per every product unit. It’s found by dividing the total number of defects found by the number of units.

Defect and defective in Six Sigma

For example, if 30 units are produced and a total of 60 defects have been found, the DPU equals 2.

Defects Per Million Opportunities (DPMO)

This represents a ratio of the number of defects in one million opportunities. In other words, how many times did you have a flaw or mistake (defect) for every opportunity there was to have a flaw or mistake.

The formula for calculating DPMO is as follows.

Defect and defective in Six Sigma

For example, consider a form that contains 15 fields of information. If 10 forms are sampled and 26 defects are found in the sample, the DPMO is:

Defect and defective in Six Sigma

It’s also possible to translate DPMO to a Six Sigma level. The goal is to reach 3.4 defects per 1 million opportunities.

Parts Per Million Defective (PPM)

The PPM represents the number of defective units per 1 million units. Again, using the car scenario, the PPM would include the total number of defective cars – cars determined to be too flawed to be sold – per every 1 million cars manufactured.

PPM is arrived at by simply taking the number of defective units in a same size, dividing that number by the total sample size, and multiplying by 1 million.

Defect and defective in Six Sigma

For example, a sample of 50 cards found that three are defective. The PPM defective is then:

Defect and defective in Six Sigma

Rolled Throughput Yield (RTY)

RTY (also known as the First Pass Yield) measures the probability (or percentage of time) that a manufacturing or service process will produce a defect-free unit. This requires mapping out a process to determine how many steps it involves.

The reliability formula for a system in series with n process steps is: Rs = (R1) (R2) (R3) (R4) … (Rn)

Since the reliability of a process step is the yield of that process step when quality is the performance metric, this formula then becomes: RTY= (Y1) (Y2) (Y3) (Y4) … (Yn) where Y is the yield (proportion good) for each step

For example, a four-step process has a yield of 0.98 in step 1, 0.95 in step 2, 0.90 in step 3, and 0.80 in step 4.

RTY = (0.98)(0.95)(0.90)(0.80) = 0.67032

This means that only 67.032% of the units completed on this process will make it through all four steps without needing any rework or repair.

Once an organization understands the different performance measurement tools and how to use them, the important next step is to determine how to calculate baseline sigma and determine what other metrics to measure.

In the time of modern and AI technology, we as a customer want that product which can fulfill our requirement. At this time you can say that the defect is a physical, functional product or service that failed to meet one of the desired specifications. 


Defect and defective in Six Sigma

What is Defect? Difference between Defect & Defective?

Examples of Defects?


Suppose, ram is going to buy a cotton shirt in a shop. After buying the shirt ram comes to know that the stitching of the shirt is loose and that's why the shirt is not comfortable to wear. The loose stitching is a 'defect'.


Defect and defective in Six Sigma
Defect and defective in Six Sigma
Understand defect with an example

Take another example for Defect:


An Ice-cream maker makes 1000 psc. ice-cream/ hrs. As per rules, the maker should mix 10 ltr milk per 1000 psc of ice cream. But the ice-cream maker put only 5 ltr milk per 1000 psc ice-cream. The deficit of the milk quantity is a 'defect'.






A defect is any item or service that exhibits a departure from specifications. A defect does not mean that the product or services cannot be used. A defect indicates only that the product result is not entirely as intended.


What is Defective?


A defective is an item or service that is considered completely unacceptable for use. Each item or service experience is either considered defective or not. In a simple way, any major defect or more than one severe defect may lead to the defective product.


Understand Defective by an example:


Suppose, ram purchase a shirt and the stitches are loose. Hence, the shirt is not usable. Means due to defect in stitches the product (shirt) become defective.


Conclusion


Products with defects can still be used for their original purpose, although the customer experience may be sub-optimal.

What is difference between defect and defective?

These defects do not functionally affect the performance of the product, still these are defects because it does not meet the specification requirement of the producer. Defective means the failing of the entire product/service to meet the required criterion.

What is a defective in Six Sigma?

In Six Sigma, a defect is a failure of a product or process. Defects are a major part of the Six Sigma program because they point to a problem that needs to be solved.

What is defective in quality control?

A defect is a type of nonconformity. It occurs when a product fails to meet specified or intended use requirements. A defective is a unit of product which contains one or more defects. Failure to meet requirements for quality characteristics are usually described in terms of defects or defectives.

How many defects are allowed in Six Sigma?

Hence the widely accepted definition of a six sigma process is a process that produces 3.4 defective parts per million opportunities (DPMO).