Employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce F/A-18E/F F414 engine maintenance time

Master of Business Administration === Joint Applied Project === The goal of this project was to determine how to decrease the F414 engine throughput time at the Aircraft Intermediate Maintenance Division (AIMD) at Naval Air Station (NAS) Lemoore, California. To achieve this goal, organizational mod...

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Main Authors: Hagan, Joel, Slack, William
Other Authors: Zolin, Roxanne
Format: Others
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2006
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/388
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-3882017-05-24T16:06:35Z Employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce F/A-18E/F F414 engine maintenance time Hagan, Joel Slack, William Zolin, Roxanne Dillard, John Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Graduate School of Business and Public Policy Master of Business Administration Joint Applied Project The goal of this project was to determine how to decrease the F414 engine throughput time at the Aircraft Intermediate Maintenance Division (AIMD) at Naval Air Station (NAS) Lemoore, California. To achieve this goal, organizational modeling was employed to evaluate how changes to the organizational structure of the Lemoore AIMD affected engine throughput time. Data collected to build the organizational model was acquired via interviews with AIMD personnel. A baseline model of the AIMD organization was developed for the purpose of modeling the organization's current structure and performance. The actual, real-world duration required to conduct F414 maintenance was compared to the duration predicted by the model and determined to be within 3%. Once confidence was gained that the baseline model accurately depicted the organization's actual F414 maintenance performance, modifications or interventions to the model were made to evaluate how organizational changes would affect F414 maintenance duration. Interventions included paralleling the tasks associated with accomplishing administrative paperwork when initially receiving the F414 engine, and tasks associated with on-engine maintenance, combining personnel positions, adding personnel, and modifying the duration and frequency of meetings. The modeled results of these modifications indicated that the paralleling effort significantly decreased the F414 maintenance duration; likewise, decreasing meeting frequency and slightly increasing duration also facilitated a decreased duration. 2006 2012-03-14T16:58:37Z 2012-03-14T16:58:37Z 2006 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/388 ocn314159623 NPS-AM-06-045 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited 1 v. application/pdf Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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sources NDLTD
description Master of Business Administration === Joint Applied Project === The goal of this project was to determine how to decrease the F414 engine throughput time at the Aircraft Intermediate Maintenance Division (AIMD) at Naval Air Station (NAS) Lemoore, California. To achieve this goal, organizational modeling was employed to evaluate how changes to the organizational structure of the Lemoore AIMD affected engine throughput time. Data collected to build the organizational model was acquired via interviews with AIMD personnel. A baseline model of the AIMD organization was developed for the purpose of modeling the organization's current structure and performance. The actual, real-world duration required to conduct F414 maintenance was compared to the duration predicted by the model and determined to be within 3%. Once confidence was gained that the baseline model accurately depicted the organization's actual F414 maintenance performance, modifications or interventions to the model were made to evaluate how organizational changes would affect F414 maintenance duration. Interventions included paralleling the tasks associated with accomplishing administrative paperwork when initially receiving the F414 engine, and tasks associated with on-engine maintenance, combining personnel positions, adding personnel, and modifying the duration and frequency of meetings. The modeled results of these modifications indicated that the paralleling effort significantly decreased the F414 maintenance duration; likewise, decreasing meeting frequency and slightly increasing duration also facilitated a decreased duration.
author2 Zolin, Roxanne
author_facet Zolin, Roxanne
Hagan, Joel
Slack, William
author Hagan, Joel
Slack, William
spellingShingle Hagan, Joel
Slack, William
Employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce F/A-18E/F F414 engine maintenance time
author_sort Hagan, Joel
title Employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce F/A-18E/F F414 engine maintenance time
title_short Employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce F/A-18E/F F414 engine maintenance time
title_full Employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce F/A-18E/F F414 engine maintenance time
title_fullStr Employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce F/A-18E/F F414 engine maintenance time
title_full_unstemmed Employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce F/A-18E/F F414 engine maintenance time
title_sort employing organizational modeling and simulation to reduce f/a-18e/f f414 engine maintenance time
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/388
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AT slackwilliam employingorganizationalmodelingandsimulationtoreducefa18eff414enginemaintenancetime
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