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Will You Add? - Technologies Impact on Medical Device Clean Rooms
Machiavelli: The Prince - Business EthicsMachiavelli said that “The first opinion which one forms of a prince, and of his understanding, is by observing the men he has around him; and when they are capable and faithful he may always be considered wise”.Similarly the selection of the employees in the modern organization is critical as they are the most valuable assets of the organization. Machiavelli proposed that those should be hired who believe in the grandness of the task and greatness of the leader rather than who are simply driven by other factors like money and reputation (Knowledge@Wharton, 2003). As per him the people looking for money and reputation will leave the moment they will get it better somewhere else.Secondly all specifically for medical device assembly. After a couple of prototypes were constructed the design was finalized. The new workstation offered many new ideas in device assembly. - Double sided airflow with two fans and two HEPA filters. More assembly area per dollar invested.
- Smaller HEPA filter area; only the first few inches above the work surface has HEPA filtered airflow. This reduces heat gain and total energy, but still offers contamination protection superior to conventional assembly stations.
- Putting the airflow at the work surface means fewer HEPA units in the ceiling. In our prototype test, particle counts below 3000 were recorded in an office environment. Less than 100 particles were measured in a Class 10,000 room. Using the clean workstation approach, the room could be designed as a Class 100,000 or unclassified with HEPA filters in the air handling system, while the work area itself can be class 10,000 or better.
- The assembly workstation has quick connects for com
4 Ways to Turn Your Restaurant Job into a Real CareerMillions of Americans work in the Food Service industry. Often those jobs start off as part-time jobs or temporary jobs. Over time, many of us learn we really enjoy the work and decide to advance into a food career -- even excel – moving into restaurant management jobs, food service management jobs, catering manager jobs, or some other Food related specialty position, like a Pastry Chef job or Executive Chef job. There are many food job opportunities to advance you into a solid career, and earn you more money. Follow the advice in this article and you may just see your own Food career aspirations become reality.Recent studies report five primary reasons why more than half of all Food Industry job Over the years, medical device cleanrooms have become more cost effective in both initial cost and operating cost due to advances in technology and methods.My first experience with cleanrooms was in 1967 with the first laminar flow room built for Honeywell’s Solid State Electronics Center in Plymouth, Minnesota. That room has been in constant use for 39 years. There were no filter changes in those 39 years. The system was upgraded with ULPA (ultra low penetration air) filters in 2004 even though the HEPA(high efficiency particulate air) filters were not loaded. Then in the early 1970s, Medtronic built their headquarter campus on the north side of the Twin Cities. Manufacturing was moved from St. Anthony to the new campus and a new cleanroom. This room was the first cleanroom for medical device manufacturing in the area. It was a “unidirectional” cross flow design. It has been in continuous use since it was constructed. In the beginning, a cross flow design was selected because all the manufacturing was done in one room, with the dirtier operations in the return end and the final assembly, cleaning and packaging near the supply wall. Throughout the next 15 years or so, medical device cleanrooms used ducted modular HEPA filter systems and walls constructed of gypsum and coated with epoxy paint. The Class 10,000 room was the norm for medical device manufacturing. The filtration system began to change in the 1980s with the introduction in 1983 of the fan-filter unit by Envirco, Inc. in Albuquerque, NM. At first, it was thought this system would be too noisy for most operations, but over time this objection disappeared as the new unit proved to be very quiet. Today, over 90% of medical device cleanrooms use the fan-filter system. The reasons are straightforward: - Lower first cost.
- Lower energy consumption.
- Easier to add or subtract HEPA filtered airflow to any space.
- Easier to take the investment in filtration to a new location.
Fan-filter units today have two basic motor-drive systems: a) permanent split capacitor motor and b) DC motor with built-in rectification from AC supply voltage. The DC motor option lowers energy consumption while maintaining airflow throughout the life of the HEPA filters. The motor automatically adjusts rpm to deliver constant flow through the HEPA filter. One change in medical device cleanrooms that we are beginning to see in our market area is the use of a low cost control system that offers unoccupied set-back of the system airflow. For systems with 40 hours per week peak flow usage, this system pays back the investment quickly. The system also identifies units that are not working and allows for setting individual fan speed from the control console. Another change we have seen in the past eight years in medical device cleanrooms is the use of modular wall systems. Typically, a large manufacturing area is defined by occupancy separation walls with interior walls being constructed of a cleanroom panel system. This technique is being used because the device manufacturer can’t afford down time for changes to the wall systems. One large manufacturer of implantable devices modifies their wall systems about 20 times per year. Walls are added, moved, and removed all while the cleanroom maintains the cleanliness rating. Technicians are gowned up appropriately and all materials and tools cleaned outside the room before the wall modification begins. By using a modular wall system, the cost of the walls disappears when compared to shutting down a large manufacturing operation for a day or so due to dust created by gypsum walls and painting. The Clean Workstation The class 10,000 room has be the standard for medical device manufacturing for the past 30 years or so. But this too may be changing. About four years ago, Medtronic asked Gerbig Engineering to develop and manufacture a clean workstation specifically for medical device assembly. After a couple of prototypes were constructed the design was finalized. The new workstation offered many new ideas in device assembly. - Double sided airflow with two fans and two HEPA filters. More assembly area per dollar invested.
- Smaller HEPA filter area; only the first few inches above the work surface has HEPA filtered airflow. This reduces heat gain and total energy, but still offers contamination protection superior to conventional assembly stations.
- Putting the airflow at the work surface means fewer HEPA units in the ceiling. In our prototype test, particle counts below 3000 were recorded in an office environment. Less than 100 particles were measured in a Class 10,000 room. Using the clean workstation approach, the room could be designed as a Class 100,000 or unclassified with HEPA filters in the air handling system, while the work area itself can be class 10,000 or better.
- The assembly workstation has quick connects for comp
Tell the Carwashes to Stop Hiring Illegal AliensFor years we have all been going to the local carwash and we conveniently tip the towel spinning driers who do not speak any English a dollar or two depending on their performance and the quality of the drying they have done. Yet have we considered that they are illegal aliens? Certainly we have or should have. Indeed we probably knew they were but did not wish to make a scene and we went on our merry way in our clean car.Why do we Americans put up with disreputable business people who hire illegal aliens and illegal immigrants like those greedy cash business, cash cow, fat cat carwash owners? They are breaking the law in hiring these illegal aliens and they know it. Sure they can say, well the gu as done in one room, with the dirtier operations in the return end and the final assembly, cleaning and packaging near the supply wall.Throughout the next 15 years or so, medical device cleanrooms used ducted modular HEPA filter systems and walls constructed of gypsum and coated with epoxy paint. The Class 10,000 room was the norm for medical device manufacturing. The filtration system began to change in the 1980s with the introduction in 1983 of the fan-filter unit by Envirco, Inc. in Albuquerque, NM. At first, it was thought this system would be too noisy for most operations, but over time this objection disappeared as the new unit proved to be very quiet. Today, over 90% of medical device cleanrooms use the fan-filter system. The reasons are straightforward: - Lower first cost.
- Lower energy consumption.
- Easier to add or subtract HEPA filtered airflow to any space.
- Easier to take the investment in filtration to a new location.
Fan-filter units today have two basic motor-drive systems: a) permanent split capacitor motor and b) DC motor with built-in rectification from AC supply voltage. The DC motor option lowers energy consumption while maintaining airflow throughout the life of the HEPA filters. The motor automatically adjusts rpm to deliver constant flow through the HEPA filter. One change in medical device cleanrooms that we are beginning to see in our market area is the use of a low cost control system that offers unoccupied set-back of the system airflow. For systems with 40 hours per week peak flow usage, this system pays back the investment quickly. The system also identifies units that are not working and allows for setting individual fan speed from the control console. Another change we have seen in the past eight years in medical device cleanrooms is the use of modular wall systems. Typically, a large manufacturing area is defined by occupancy separation walls with interior walls being constructed of a cleanroom panel system. This technique is being used because the device manufacturer can’t afford down time for changes to the wall systems. One large manufacturer of implantable devices modifies their wall systems about 20 times per year. Walls are added, moved, and removed all while the cleanroom maintains the cleanliness rating. Technicians are gowned up appropriately and all materials and tools cleaned outside the room before the wall modification begins. By using a modular wall system, the cost of the walls disappears when compared to shutting down a large manufacturing operation for a day or so due to dust created by gypsum walls and painting. The Clean Workstation The class 10,000 room has be the standard for medical device manufacturing for the past 30 years or so. But this too may be changing. About four years ago, Medtronic asked Gerbig Engineering to develop and manufacture a clean workstation specifically for medical device assembly. After a couple of prototypes were constructed the design was finalized. The new workstation offered many new ideas in device assembly. - Double sided airflow with two fans and two HEPA filters. More assembly area per dollar invested.
- Smaller HEPA filter area; only the first few inches above the work surface has HEPA filtered airflow. This reduces heat gain and total energy, but still offers contamination protection superior to conventional assembly stations.
- Putting the airflow at the work surface means fewer HEPA units in the ceiling. In our prototype test, particle counts below 3000 were recorded in an office environment. Less than 100 particles were measured in a Class 10,000 room. Using the clean workstation approach, the room could be designed as a Class 100,000 or unclassified with HEPA filters in the air handling system, while the work area itself can be class 10,000 or better.
- The assembly workstation has quick connects for com
How To Make - MoneyListen carefully to this; you can change your income significantly and your life by changing your daily habits. You must be willing to change! You must be willing work hard for to make the changes.It doesn't take a smart people to figure it out why we go broke. It means that our spending is more than what we earn. People go broke because their expenses are higher than their income!You must know how much money have and if you don't have any right now, you must know how much money you want to have in the future. Believe me, when you know your goals and destination and you know where you are going, it will give you the motivation to go there!
Listen, your time is the most valuable thing that you and ocation.
Fan-filter units today have two basic motor-drive systems: a) permanent split capacitor motor and b) DC motor with built-in rectification from AC supply voltage. The DC motor option lowers energy consumption while maintaining airflow throughout the life of the HEPA filters. The motor automatically adjusts rpm to deliver constant flow through the HEPA filter. One change in medical device cleanrooms that we are beginning to see in our market area is the use of a low cost control system that offers unoccupied set-back of the system airflow. For systems with 40 hours per week peak flow usage, this system pays back the investment quickly. The system also identifies units that are not working and allows for setting individual fan speed from the control console. Another change we have seen in the past eight years in medical device cleanrooms is the use of modular wall systems. Typically, a large manufacturing area is defined by occupancy separation walls with interior walls being constructed of a cleanroom panel system. This technique is being used because the device manufacturer can’t afford down time for changes to the wall systems. One large manufacturer of implantable devices modifies their wall systems about 20 times per year. Walls are added, moved, and removed all while the cleanroom maintains the cleanliness rating. Technicians are gowned up appropriately and all materials and tools cleaned outside the room before the wall modification begins. By using a modular wall system, the cost of the walls disappears when compared to shutting down a large manufacturing operation for a day or so due to dust created by gypsum walls and painting. The Clean Workstation The class 10,000 room has be the standard for medical device manufacturing for the past 30 years or so. But this too may be changing. About four years ago, Medtronic asked Gerbig Engineering to develop and manufacture a clean workstation specifically for medical device assembly. After a couple of prototypes were constructed the design was finalized. The new workstation offered many new ideas in device assembly. - Double sided airflow with two fans and two HEPA filters. More assembly area per dollar invested.
- Smaller HEPA filter area; only the first few inches above the work surface has HEPA filtered airflow. This reduces heat gain and total energy, but still offers contamination protection superior to conventional assembly stations.
- Putting the airflow at the work surface means fewer HEPA units in the ceiling. In our prototype test, particle counts below 3000 were recorded in an office environment. Less than 100 particles were measured in a Class 10,000 room. Using the clean workstation approach, the room could be designed as a Class 100,000 or unclassified with HEPA filters in the air handling system, while the work area itself can be class 10,000 or better.
- The assembly workstation has quick connects for com
Why Talking About Quality or Customer Service Makes Your Customers Yawn (find something else to say)Let's be clear. The days of saying you deliver either superior quality or superior customer service to secure yourself any competitive advantage are gone.In today’s market, the competition is so ferocious that the customer now expects that you will deliver a quality product and provide decent customer service. These are a given - not things to set you apart.If you don’t deliver these as standard practice, you won’t survive - let alone prosper.As fast as the quality bubble grew, it popped.Quality used to be a subjective concept - it meant different things to different people. That was until the academics, gurus (like Dr Edward Deming) and International Organiz ted of a cleanroom panel system. This technique is being used because the device manufacturer can’t afford down time for changes to the wall systems. One large manufacturer of implantable devices modifies their wall systems about 20 times per year. Walls are added, moved, and removed all while the cleanroom maintains the cleanliness rating. Technicians are gowned up appropriately and all materials and tools cleaned outside the room before the wall modification begins. By using a modular wall system, the cost of the walls disappears when compared to shutting down a large manufacturing operation for a day or so due to dust created by gypsum walls and painting.The Clean Workstation The class 10,000 room has be the standard for medical device manufacturing for the past 30 years or so. But this too may be changing. About four years ago, Medtronic asked Gerbig Engineering to develop and manufacture a clean workstation specifically for medical device assembly. After a couple of prototypes were constructed the design was finalized. The new workstation offered many new ideas in device assembly. - Double sided airflow with two fans and two HEPA filters. More assembly area per dollar invested.
- Smaller HEPA filter area; only the first few inches above the work surface has HEPA filtered airflow. This reduces heat gain and total energy, but still offers contamination protection superior to conventional assembly stations.
- Putting the airflow at the work surface means fewer HEPA units in the ceiling. In our prototype test, particle counts below 3000 were recorded in an office environment. Less than 100 particles were measured in a Class 10,000 room. Using the clean workstation approach, the room could be designed as a Class 100,000 or unclassified with HEPA filters in the air handling system, while the work area itself can be class 10,000 or better.
- The assembly workstation has quick connects for com
Truth or Consequences: Hiring for IntegrityIt is a well-documented fact that at least 2 out of every 5 applications contain one major fabrication. What the employer doesn't know can, and almost certainly will, have a tremendous impact on that organization!Dr. Julian Cano, Ed.D, a Clinical Psychologist of 30 years, once said that we are all taught from birth both to lie as well as catch lies. He reasons that most people have the necessary skills and abilities to effectively lie to others and to tell when someone is lying to them in return. Dr. Cano adds that it can also be morally and socially acceptable to lie, but at the same time, unacceptable to indicate to others that they are being untruthful! This is absolutely true and it descri specifically for medical device assembly. After a couple of prototypes were constructed the design was finalized. The new workstation offered many new ideas in device assembly.- Double sided airflow with two fans and two HEPA filters. More assembly area per dollar invested.
- Smaller HEPA filter area; only the first few inches above the work surface has HEPA filtered airflow. This reduces heat gain and total energy, but still offers contamination protection superior to conventional assembly stations.
- Putting the airflow at the work surface means fewer HEPA units in the ceiling. In our prototype test, particle counts below 3000 were recorded in an office environment. Less than 100 particles were measured in a Class 10,000 room. Using the clean workstation approach, the room could be designed as a Class 100,000 or unclassified with HEPA filters in the air handling system, while the work area itself can be class 10,000 or better.
- The assembly workstation has quick connects for compressed air and electrical circuits to pass from station to station eliminating drops from the ceiling.
- Using a shorter HEPA filter allows for storage or monitors to be mounted at a more usable height.
Today, with the advances in clean room construction and controls, a manufacturer needs to make sure that they are considering all options before investing in a clean room. A little time researching and using an expert system designer work out the specifications, one could realize thousands of dollars in startup as well as on going costs,.
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