I suggest you read Wheeler's book "Understanding Statistical Process Control". You must first understand the control charts originally created by Dr. Shewhart are meant to do 2 things:
1. Assess the consistency of the basis for comparison (this is the range chart).
2. Compare two sources of variation to determine which has greater leverage (this is the X-bar chart),
They answer the questions; Where should the focus of work be (within or between)? and What is the nature of the investigation (special or common)?
The variation quantified/depicted by the range chart is a function of the x's changing at that "frequency". The first question is do those x's (within subgroup) exhibit consistent and stable variation? If so, that variation can be quantified and those sources of variation can be compared to other sources of variation (between subgroup) to determine which has greater leverage. If the range chart exhibits inconsistent (special cause like) variation then you should seek to understand why. If the range chart exhibits consistent variation AND the X-bar chart is "in-control", the largest source of variation is due to the within subgroup x's. If the x-bar chart is "out-of-control" then the between sources (x's changing at that frequency) dominate.
"All models are wrong, some are useful" G.E.P. Box