Chapter 6: Process Selection and Facility Layout

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Process Layout Advantages

-Can handle a variety of processing requirements -Not particularly vulnerable to equipment failures -General-purpose equipment is often less costly and easier and less costly to maintain -It is possible to use individual incentive systems

Product Layout Disadvantages

-Creates dull, repetitive jobs -Poorly skilled workers may not maintain equipment or quality of output -Fairly inflexible to changes in volume or product or process design -Highly susceptible to shutdowns -Preventive maintenance, capacity for quick repair and spare-parts inventories are necessary expenses -Individual incentive plans are impractical

Job Shop

-Customized goods or services -Advantages: able to handle a wide variety of work -Disadvantages: slow, high cost per unit, complex planning and scheduling -Example: custom furniture

Facilities layout decisions arise when:

-Designing new facilities -Redesigning existing facilities

Product Layout Advantages

-High rate of output -Low unit cost -Labor specialization -Low material handling cost per unit -High utilization of labor and equipment -Established routing and scheduling -Routine accounting, purchasing, and inventory control

Continuous

-Highly standardized goods or services -adv: Very efficient, very high volume -disadv: Very rigid, lack of variety, costly to change, very high cost of downtime -Example: assembly lines, apple computers

Process Layout Disadvantages

-In-process inventories can be high -Routing and scheduling pose continual challenges -Equipment utilization rates are low -Material handling is slow and inefficient -Reduced spans of supervision -Special attention necessary for each product or customer -Accounting, inventory control, and purchasing are more involved

Batch

-Semi-standardized goods or -services -Advantages: flexibility; easy to add or change products or services -Disadvantages: moderate cost per unit, moderate scheduling complexity

Repetitive / Assembly

-Standardized goods or services -Advantages: low unit cost, high volume, efficient -Disadvantages: low flexibility, high cost of downtime

Process flexibility

-The degree to which the system can be adjusted to changes in processing requirements due to such factors as -Product and service design changes -Volume changes -Changes in technology

Cycle time

-the maximum time allowed at each workstation to complete its set of tasks on a unit -Cycle time also establishes the output rate of a line -can only be as fast as the weakest link

Service layouts

-warehouses and storage layouts -retail layouts -office layouts

Two key questions in process selection:

1. How much variety will the process need to be able to handle? 2. How much volume will the process need to be able to handle?

The Need for Layout Planning

1. Inefficient operations -High cost -Bottlenecks 2. Accidents or safety hazards 3. Changes in product or service design 4. Introduction of new products or services 5. Changes in output volume or product mix 6. Changes in methods or equipment 7. Changes in environmental or other legal requirements 8. Morale problems

Types of Processing

1. Job Shop 2. Batch 3. Repetitive / Assembly 4. Continuous

Basic Layout Types

1. Product Layout 2. Process Layout 3. Fixed-Position Layout

Key aspects of process strategy:

1. capital intensity 2. process flexibility

Process Selection has major implications for:

Capacity planning Layout of facilities Equipment Design of work systems

Two key factors of service layouts:

Customer contact Degree of customization

Why is line balancing important?

It allows us to use labor and equipment more efficiently To avoid fairness issues that arise when one workstation must work harder than another

Fixed-Position Layout

Layout in which the product or project remains stationary, and workers, materials, and equipment are moved as needed (It (the product) can't move. Example: building a building, hoover dam)

Goal of Line Balancing

Obtain task grouping that represent approximately equal time requirements since this minimizes idle time along the line and results in a high utilization of equipment and labor

Non-Repetitive Processing

Process Layouts

Repetitive Processing:

Product Layouts

Process Selection

Refers to deciding on the way production of goods or services will be organized

Facilities Layout

The configuration of departments, work centers, and equipment, with particular emphasis on movement of work (customers or materials) through the system

Designing Product Layouts: Line Balancing

The goal of a product layout is to arrange workers or machines in the sequence that operations need to be performed

Capital intensity

The mix of equipment and labor that will be used by the organization

Line Balancing

The process of assigning tasks to workstations in such a way that the workstations have approximately equal time requirements Making sure there are no bottlenecks

What can affect cycle time or output rate?

You can't change the time Equipment problems Absenteeism

Product Layout

layout that uses standardized processing operations to achieve smooth, rapid, high volume flow

Process Layout

layouts that can handle varied processing requirements

Precedence Diagram

look at chart A diagram that shows elemental tasks and their precedence requirements

Product layout

look at chart layout that uses standardized processing operations to achieve smooth, rapid, high volume flow

Process Layouts

look at chart layouts that can handle varied processing requirements

Output rate =

operating time per day (minutes) / cycle time

Cycle time =

operating time per day (minutes) / desired output rate


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