Pilot production
Pilot production manufactures a limited quantity of products using production-intent processes, equipment, and supply chain to validate readiness for full-scale manufacturing. This trial run identifies process issues, verifies supplier performance, trains production personnel, and builds initial inventory before committing to volume production rates.
Examples
Electronics pilot run: A company produces 500 units of a new product using the production assembly line, production tooling, and production supplier components. The pilot validates cycle times, identifies workstation bottlenecks, and confirms suppliers can deliver to production specifications and timing.
Automotive pilot build: Before start of production, a vehicle manufacturer runs pilot builds at increasing volumes to validate assembly processes, supplier quality, and production rates. Issues discovered during pilot builds are resolved before mass production begins.
Medical device pilot lot: A pilot production lot manufactured under production conditions provides units for final design verification testing, process validation, and initial customer evaluations while demonstrating manufacturing control for regulatory submissions.
Definition
Pilot production bridges prototype development and mass production. While prototypes prove the design works, pilot production proves it can be manufactured consistently, cost-effectively, and at scale. Issues invisible in prototype quantities often emerge at pilot volumes.
Common pilot production issues include process capability problems not evident in small samples, supplier quality inconsistencies, tooling adjustments needed for production rates, training gaps in production personnel, and material flow problems in production environments. The pilot phase exists to find and fix these issues.
Pilot production planning includes defining success criteria, establishing measurement and feedback mechanisms, allocating engineering resources for problem-solving, and building contingency time before committed mass production dates. Aggressive schedules that don't allow time for pilot learning often backfire.
Pilot units may be used for various purposes: customer evaluations, safety and regulatory testing, sales samples, and initial inventory if quality permits. Decisions about pilot unit disposition should be planned in advance, including rework or scrap procedures for units that don't meet specifications.
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