Monday, April 20, 2020

Restarting the Economy



Sadly, I have been down the road where well documented, proven technology was not used because
A.) The decision maker was ignorant of the fact that off-the-shelf technology existed
B.) They were proud of their ability to come up with "Home Made" solution.
C.) NIH syndrome
D.) They derived some advantage from the fragility of their kludged solution(s).

Existing technology
The principles of "controlling" a process are well established. They have their own jargon. They stubbed their toes on all the furniture and flagged the shoals and reefs.

For example, the image shown above is from a tutorial at the Control Engineering website.

The specific article is about "The Smith Predictor" which presents a solution to the problem of known lag-times between a corrective action and being able to quantify the effect of that action. The Smith Predictor was first proposed by Otto Smith in 1957. It is not a radical, new idea. It is used every day in steel mills, oil refineries and chemical plants.

Instabilities
There are two main causes of instability in control systems.

One of them is excessive gain, that is over-correction.

The second main cause is lag-time between corrective action and being able to verify the results of that action.

Consider adjusting the temperature of the shower in the morning, a task all of us have done thousands of times.

Perhaps you live in a house with many other people. One of them may have just taken a shower and already filled the feed-pipe with hot water. Perhaps a half-dozen have just taken a shower and the water heater is filled with luke warm water.

Also consider that the distance between the control knobs and the shower-head is significantly longer than the distance between the knobs and the spigot for the bath.

What does a typical person do? They turn on the hot-water tap and monitor the temperature coming out of the spigot for the tub. Once it starts to warm up, they add cold water to suit, then turn the valve to direct the water to the shower head. They wait fifteen seconds and then step beneath the shower to complete their shower.

Why does EVERYBODY do it that way? There must be a reason.

It is pretty clear that first running the water through the spigot has at least a couple of advantages.

LESS LAG TIME! There is less time between the adjustment of the knobs and the results as felt in the output. The path to the spigot is shorter and the water-flow rate is greater. The hopeful bather can make many, small adjustments using the spigot in the time it would take to make one adjustment using water flowing out of the shower-head.

Further, if forced to use the shower-head, some bathers would become impatient and over-compensate and burn themselves. If they didn't burn themselves, they would oscillate wildly between TOO HOT and TOO COLD and never settling on a tolerable solution.

Other bathers very timidly make adjustments and are never sure when their change takes effect. They can be in the shower for hours adjusting the temperature while everybody else in the house is impatiently waiting to use the bathroom.

Frankly, do the bathers who are forced to modulate water temperature by running the water through the shower-head sound like our problem restarting the post-Covid-19 economy?

Saving you from details
I will not pound you with details about Control Engineering.

If you have an interest, you can perform a search on "PID controllers" "Tuning PID controllers" "Ziegler-Nichols tuning"

The Control Engineering website as some great tutorials on tuning PID controllers. Start HERE

One key point is that restarting the economy cannot be binary ON/OFF. The restart has to be modulated with the lowest risk segments leading the higher risk portions. Three-shift operations might start with a single shift or it might rotate through all three shifts with a cool-down shift between productions. Note that the factory could be flooded with ozone in the off-shift to prevent cross-shift contamination.

The economy has to restart on a "earn your way as you go" basis, a concept that is foreign to some people but should be familiar to most of my readers

Some counties and industry will clean-and-jerk the start-up. Others will keep toppling backwards.

There is no need to reinvent the wheel. We have a chance to stand on the shoulders of giants.

***Added at the bottom because it didn't fit into the flow of the post***
We need to stop obsessing about the technologies we don't have. We don't have universal testing with five-minute turn-around.

We do have the ability to monitor common symptoms like shortness-of-breath and running a temperature.

Yes, I know that not every Covid-19 patient has an elevated temperature. But the object of statistics is to make inferences about the population based on the measurement of a sample, not diagnose individuals.

But if more than 1.5% of the patients showing up at Doc-in-a-Box have symptoms of Covid-19, then your grip on the tiger's tail is slipping.

"But Joe, it could be just the flu?"

Sure. And the conditions that allow flu contagion to rip through a population are the same conditions that allow Covid-19 to communicate. Using % Symptoms doesn't control Covid-19, it flags populations that are sloppy about epidemic hygene. To me, that is a double win.

4 comments:

  1. I didn't know that The Smith Predictor had a name. I always thought it was obvious.
    But the lockdown was supposed to be two weeks to "Flatten the Curve". Not eliminate Covid.
    Not "Flatten the Economy". Or is it?
    Time is up.
    We are at war and we are taking the day off.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Kind of reminds me of an old joke:

    The intern

    A toothpaste factory had a problem. They sometimes mistakenly shipped empty boxes without the tube inside. This challenged their perceived quality with the buyers and distributors.

    Understanding how important the relationship with them was, the CEO of the company assembled his top people. They decided to hire an external engineering company to solve their empty boxes problem. The project followed the usual process: budget and project sponsor allocated, RFP, and third-parties selected.

    Six months (and $2 million) later they had a fantastic solution - on time, on budget, and high quality. Everyone in the project was pleased.

    They solved the problem by using a high-tech precision scale that would sound a bell and flash lights whenever a toothpaste box weighed less than it should. The line would stop, someone would remove the defective box, and then press another button to re-start the line. As a result of the new package monitoring process, no empty boxes were being shipped out of the factory.

    With no more customer complaints, the CEO felt the $3 million was well spent. He then reviewed the line statistics report and discovered the number of empty boxes picked up by the scale in the first week was consistent with projections, however, the next three weeks were zero! The estimated rate should have been at least a dozen boxes a day. He had the engineers check the equipment, they verified the report as accurate.

    Puzzled, the CEO traveled down to the factory, viewed the part of the line where the precision scale was installed, and observed just ahead of the new $3 million dollar solution sat a $20 desk fan blowing the empty boxes off the belt and into a bin. He asked the line supervisor what that was about.

    "Oh, that," the supervisor replied, "Jack, the summer intern from maintenance, put it there because he was tired of walking over every time the bell rang."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I once ran a robot weld line and one welder in particular set sealant on fire that would send soot and fumes my way further down the line at my work station.
      I programmed the welder to snuff out the flame.
      Later the Tooling Manager came by and asked if I'd submitted it as a suggestion. I said no, it was for my convenience. I got a $5k suggestion award because his guys didn't have to clean the lenses 6 times a day in a vision station just after the robot.

      Delete
    2. I don't remember the interns name, but the story rings a bell.

      Delete

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