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This page has been designed to help in understanding and learning the use, design and analysis of Control Charts, which is the most important tool of Statistical Quality Control.
The information has been formatted in the form of a tutorial, which will guide you through the process. It includes the history, background information, the uses, the types with examples, analysis of patterns, related software and additional sources of information about control charts.
Control charting is one of the tools of Statistical Quality Control (SQC) It is the most technically sophisticated tool of SQC. It was developed in the 1920s by Dr. Walter A. Shewhart of the Bell Telephone Labs.
Dr. Shewhart developed the control charts as an statistical approach to the study of manufacturing process variation for the purpose of improving the economic effectiveness of the process. These methods are based on continuous monitoring of process variation.
A typical control chart is a graphical display of a quality characteristic that has been measured or computed from a sample versus the sample number or time. The chart contains a center line that represents the average value of the quality characteristic corresponding to the in-control state. Two other horizontal lines, called the upper control limit (UCL) and the lower control limit (LCL) are also drawn. These control limits are chosen so that if the process is in control, nearly all of the sample points will fall between them. As long as the points plot within the control limits, the process is assumed to be in control, and no action is necessary.
However, a point that plots outside of the control limits is interpreted as evidence that the process is out of control, and investigation and corrective action is required to find and eliminate the assignable causes responsible for this behavior. The control points are connected with straight line segments for easy visualization.
Even if all the points plot inside the control limits, if they behave in a systematic or nonrandom manner, then this is an indication that the process is out of control.
Control chart is a device for describing in a precise manner what is meant by statistical control. Its uses are
The process is out of control if any one or more of the criteria is met.