Production and Operations Management Lesson 07 - Material Requirements Planning
To ensure good master scheduling, the master scheduler (the human being) must
-Include all demands from product sales, warehouse replenishment, spares, and interplant requirements. -Never lose sight of the aggregate plan. -Be involved with customer order promising. -Be visible to all levels of management. -Objectively trade off manufacturing, marketing, and engineering conflicts. -Identify and communicate all problems.
Available to promise
A feature of MRP systems that identifies the difference between the number of units currently included in the master schedule and the actual (firm) customer orders.
Assemble-to-order
A final assembly is made from standard options that the customer chooses. Examples: trucks, generators, motors.
Low-Level Coding
If all identical parts occur at the same level for each end product, the total number of parts and materials needed for a product can be computed easily.
Process
Includes industries such as foundries, rubber and plastics, specialty paper, chemicals, paint, drug, food processors.
Engineer-to-order
Items are fabricated or assembled completely to customer specification. Examples: turbine generators, heavy machine tools.
Assemble-to-stock
Items are manufactured by machine rather than assembled from parts. These are standard stock items carried in anticipation of customer demand. Examples: piston rings, electrical switches.
Make-to-order
Items are manufactured by machine to customer order. These are generally industrial orders. Examples: bearings, gears, fasteners.
Net change systems
MRP systems that calculate the impact of a change in the MRP data (the inventory status, BOM, or master schedule) immediately.
Bill-of-materials (BOM)
The complete product description, listing the materials, parts, and components; the quantity of each item; and also the sequence in which the product is created.
Material requirements planning (MRP)
The logic for determining the number of parts, components, and materials needed to produce a product
(EOQ)
economic order quantity
Master Production Schedule
is the time-phased plan specifying how many of each end item the firm plans to build and when.
(LTC)
least total cost
(LUC)
least unit cost
(L4L)
lot-for-lot