I am now doing a poly silicon project. And I found that when you are doing the commissioning job. The most important thing is the Communication between all of the departments.
Submitted by JimCahill on Fri, 09/04/2009 - 15:31.
I had the chance to be up on the North Slope of Alaska in December when one of the major oil companies was commissioning one of the first Foundation fieldbus installations.
What really stood out in my mind was the after breakfast meetings where the project manager Duane Toavs (then with the oil company, now with Emerson) went through the plan for the day, with each team reporting their plan day, any issues that came up from the previous day, and other issues which may impact schedule. He was constantly in contact with teams and sharing issues with other teams.
This consuming focus around communications led to a remarkably smooth commissioning, something that's not an easy task when it's 40 degrees below zero and totally dark, other than a few hours of deep twilight.
Communications during commissioning
I had the chance to be up on the North Slope of Alaska in December when one of the major oil companies was commissioning one of the first Foundation fieldbus installations.
What really stood out in my mind was the after breakfast meetings where the project manager Duane Toavs (then with the oil company, now with Emerson) went through the plan for the day, with each team reporting their plan day, any issues that came up from the previous day, and other issues which may impact schedule. He was constantly in contact with teams and sharing issues with other teams.
This consuming focus around communications led to a remarkably smooth commissioning, something that's not an easy task when it's 40 degrees below zero and totally dark, other than a few hours of deep twilight.