Chapter 6
Lean manufacturing
a means of achieving high levels of customer service with minimal inventory investment
assembly line balancing
assigning all tasks to a series of workstations so that the required cycle time is met and idle time is minimized
Make-to-order
product is built directly from raw materials and components in response to a specific customer order customer order decoupling point could be in either "raw materials at the manufacturing site" or the "supplier inventory e.g. airplanes
Efficiency
sum of task times (T)/actual number of workstations(Na)xWorkstation cycle time (C)
Lead time
the time needed to respond to a customer order
Production Process Mapping
-Develop a high-level map of a supply chain process -Useful to understand how material flows and where inventory is held -First step in analyzing the flow of material through a production process
Manufacturing Cell Layout
A dedicated area where products that are similar in process requirements are produced Cells are designed to perform a specific set of processes Dedicated to a limited range of products
Days-of-supply
A measure of the number of days of supply of an item
Make-to-stock
A production environment where the customer is served "on-demand" from finished goods inventory. balance the level of inventory and customer service to satisfy customers e.g. television, clothing
Inventory turn
An efficiency measure where the cost of goods sold is divided by the total average value of inventory
Assembly Line and Continuous Process
Area where an item is produced through a fixed sequence of workstations, designed to achieve a specific production rate A process that converts raw materials into finished product in one contiguous process
Workcenter Layout
Most common approach to developing this type of layout is to arrange workcenters in a way that optimizes the movement of material Optimal placement often means placing work centers with high levels of interdepartmental traffic adjacent to each other Sometimes is referred to as a job shop and is focused on a particular type of operation
Assemble-to-order
Preassembled components, subassemblies, and modules are put together in response to a specific customer order primary task is to define a customer's "order in terms of alternative components", since these are carried in inventory e.g. Laptops
Reducing Task Time Possibilities
Split the task - Can we split the task so that complete units are processed in two workstations? Share the task - Can the task be shared so an adjacent workstation does part of the work? Use parallel workstations Use a more skilled worker Work overtime Redesign - It may be possible to redesign the product to reduce the task time
Engineer-to-order
The firm works with the customer to design the product, which is then made from purchased material, parts, and components e.g. buildings
Little's Law
The flow of items through a production process can be described using Inventory = Throughput rate × Flow time Inventory - materials held by the firm Throughput - long-term average rate that items are flowing through the process Flow time - time for a single unit to completely flow through the entire process
Customer order decoupling point
The point in the supply chain where inventory is positioned to allow the preceding processes to operate independently is the
Total average value of inventory
The total investment in inventory at the firm: -Raw materials -Work-in-process -Finished goods
Production processes
are used to make any manufactured item Step 1 - Source the parts needed Step 2 - Make the product Step 3 - Deliver the product
workstation cycle time (C).
production time per day/required output per day