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Ch 3 Manufacturing Models
and Metrics
Sections:
1. Mathematical Models of Production Performance
2. Manufacturing Costs
1
Why use metrics
“A system of related measures that facilitates the
quantification of some particular characteristic”
 To track performance in successive periods,
 Try out new technologies and systems to determine their
merits, identify their problems,
 To compare alternative methods, and
 To make good decisions.
2
Production Concepts and
Mathematical Models
Production performance metrics:
 Production rate Rp for an individual processing or
assembly operation is usually expressed as an hourly rate,
that is, number of work units completed per hour (pc/hr).
 Cycle time Tc is defined as the time that one work unit
spends being processed or assembled. It is the time
between when one work unit begins processing or
assembly and when the next unit begins.
3
Production Concepts and
Mathematical Models
Production performance metrics:
 Production capacity PC
 Utilization U
 Availability A
 Manufacturing lead time MLT
 Work-in-progress WIP
4
Operation Cycle Time
Typical cycle time for a production operation:
Tc = To + Th + Tth
where
Tc = cycle time (min/pc),
To = processing time for the operation (min/pc),
Th = handling time (min/pc) (e.g., loading and unloading the
production machine), and
Tth = tool handling time (min/pc) (e.g., time to change tools)
5
Production Rate (batch/job shop/flow)
Batch production:
Batch time Tb = Tsu + QTc
where
Tb= batch processing time (min)
Tsu= setup time to prepare for the batch (min)
Q= batch quantity (pc)
Tc = cycle time per work unit (min/cycle)
Average production time per work unit Tp
Tp = Tb/Q= Tsu/Q + Tc
Hourly production rate Rp = 60/Tp 6
Production Rate (batch/job shop/flow)
Job shop production:
For Q = 1, Tp = Tsu + Tc
For Q > 1, Tp is determined as in batch production
Mass production:
Rp  Rc = 60/Tc since Tsu/Q  0 (Q is very large)
where
Rc = operation cycle rate of the machine (pc/hr)
Tc = operation cycle time (min/pc)
7
Production Rate (batch/job shop/flow)
Flow line production:
Bottleneck station is the station with the largest operation
time (with highest utilization)
Tc = Tr + Max To
Tc = cycle time of the production line (min/cycle)
Tr = time to transfer work units between workstations each
cycle (min/cycle)
Max To = operation time at the bottleneck station
(min/cycle)
Rc = 60/Tc
Rc = theoretical (ideal) production rate (cycles/hr)
8
Production Capacity
“Max rate of output that a production facility is able to produce
under a given set of assumed operating conditions”
Operating conditions:
 Number of shifts per day
 Number of days per week
 Employment levels
A work center is a manufacturing system in the plant typically
consisting of one worker and one machine.
9
Production Capacity
Plant capacity for facility in which parts are made in one operation (no = 1):
PC = n Sw Hsh Rp
where
PC = weekly plant capacity (units/wk)
n = number of work centers working in parallel
Sw = number of shifts per week
Hsh = hr/shift
Rp = hourly production rate of each work center (output units/hr)
10
Production Capacity
Plant capacity for facility in which parts require multiple operations (no > 1):
PCw =
where no = number of operations in the routing
w sh p
o
nS H R
n
11
Production Capacity
This capacity model assumes that all n machines are producing 100% of
the time and there are no bottleneck operations due to variations in
process routings to inhibit smooth flow of work through the plant.
There are some operations that are fully utilized while other operations
occasionally stand idle waiting for work.
That is, utilization varies.
12
Utilization and Availability
Utilization: U =
where Q = quantity actually produced, and PC = plant capacity
“the amount of output of a production facility relative to its capacity”
Utilization can be assessed for an entire plant, a single machine in the
plant or any other productive resource.
PC
Q
13
Utilization and Availability
Availability: A =
where MTBF = mean time between failures, and
MTTR = mean time to repair
“a common measure for reliability of equipment”
MTBF
MTTR
MTBF 
14
Availability -
MTBF and MTTR Defined
15
Manufacturing Lead Time
where
MLTj = manufacturing lead time for part or product j (min)
Tsuji = setup time for operation i (min)
Qj = quantity of part or product j in the batch being processed (pc)
Tcji = operation cycle time for operation i (min/pc)
Tnoji = non-operation time (handling, temporary storage, inspections)
associated with operation i (min)
“the total time required to process a given part/product through the
plant including any lost time due to delays, time spent in storage,
reliability problems, and so on”
 
1
oj
n
j suji j cji noji
i
MLT T Q T T

  

16
Manufacturing Lead Time
MLT = no (Tsu + QTc + Tno)
where
MLT = manufacturing lead time,
no = number of operations,
Tsu = setup time,
Q = batch quantity,
Tc = cycle time per part, and
Tno = non-operation time (handling, temporary storage, inspections)
17
Manufacturing Lead Time
Job shop when Q=1
MLT = no (Tsu + Tc + Tno)
Mass production when Q
MLT = no QTc
Flow line
MLT = no (Tr + Max To) = no Tc
18
Work-In-Process
WIP =
where WIP = work-in-process, pc;
A = availability,
U = utilization,
PC = plant capacity, pc/wk;
MLT = manufacturing lead time, wk;
Sw = shifts per week,
Hsh = hours per shift, hr/shift
“quantity of parts or products currently located in the factory that are
either being processed or between processing operations”
“the inventory in the state of being transformed from raw material to
finished product”
    
w sh w sh
AU PC MLT Q MLT
S H S H

19
Costs of Manufacturing Operations
 Two major categories of manufacturing costs:
1. Fixed costs - remain constant for any output level
2. Variable costs - vary in proportion to production
output level
 Adding fixed and variable costs
TC = FC + VC(Q)
where TC = total costs,
FC = fixed costs (e.g., building, equipment, taxes),
VC = variable costs (e.g., labor, materials, utilities),
Q = output level.
20
Fixed and Variable Costs
21
Manufacturing Costs
 Alternative classification of manufacturing costs:
1. Direct labor - wages and benefits paid to workers
2. Materials - costs of raw materials
3. Overhead - all of the other expenses associated with
running the manufacturing firm
 Factory overhead consists of the costs of operating
the factory other than direct labor and materials.
 Corporate overhead is the cost not related to the
company’s manufacturing activities.
22
Typical Manufacturing Costs
23
Overhead Rates
Factory overhead rate: FOHR =
Corporate overhead rate: COHR =
where
FOHC=annual factory overhead costs ($/yr)
COHC= annual corporate overhead costs ($/yr)
DLC = annual direct labor costs ($/yr)
FOHC
DLC
DLC
COHC
24
Example 3.5
Determine
a. The factory overhead rate for each plant
b. The corporate overhead rate
Expense
category
Plant 1 ($) Plant 2 ($) Headquarters ($) Totals ($)
Direct
labor
800,000 400,000 1,200,000
Materials 2,500,000 1,500,000 4,000,000
Factory
expense
2,000,000 1,100,000 3,100,000
Corporate
expense
7,200,000 7,200,000
Totals 5,300,000 3,000,000 7,200,000 15,500,000
25
Cost of Equipment Usage
Hourly cost of worker-machine system:
Co = CL(1 + FOHRL) + Cm(1 + FOHRm)
where
Co = hourly rate, $/hr;
CL = labor rate, $/hr;
FOHRL = labor factory overhead rate,
Cm = machine rate, $/hr;
FOHRm = machine factory overhead rate
26
Averaging Procedures for Production
Models
number of batches of the various part/product styles
Q
n 
 
1
Average batch quantity
batch quantity for part/product style 1,...,
Q
n
j
j
Q
j Q
Q
Q
n
Q j j n


 

27
Averaging Procedures for Production
Models
1
Average number of operations in the process routing
number of operations in the process routing of
part/product style
Q
n
oj
j
o
Q
oj
n
n
n
n
j




28
Averaging Procedures for Production
Models
1
Average setup time for part/product
setup time for operation in the processing sequence
for part/product style
oj
n
sujk
k
suj
oj
sujk
j
T
T
n
T k
j




29
Averaging Procedures for Production
Models
1
1
Grand average setup time
Q
Q
n
oj suj
j
su n
oj
j
n T
T
n





30
Averaging Procedures for Production
Models
 
1
Average operation cycle time for item
cycle time for operation for item
1,2,...,
oj
n
cjk
k
cj
oj
cjk
oj
j
T
T
n
T k j
k n





31
Averaging Procedures for Production
Models
1
1
Grand average cycle time for all items
Q
Q
Q
n
oj cj
j
c n
oj
j
n
n T
T
n





32
Averaging Procedures for Production
Models
1
Average nonoperation time for item
nonopertion time for operation for item
oj
n
nojk
k
noj
oj
nojk
j
T
T
n
T k j




33
Averaging Procedures for Production
Models
1
1
Grand average nonoperation time
Q
Q
n
oj noj
j
no n
oj
j
n T
T
n





34

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5271197.ppt

  • 1. Ch 3 Manufacturing Models and Metrics Sections: 1. Mathematical Models of Production Performance 2. Manufacturing Costs 1
  • 2. Why use metrics “A system of related measures that facilitates the quantification of some particular characteristic”  To track performance in successive periods,  Try out new technologies and systems to determine their merits, identify their problems,  To compare alternative methods, and  To make good decisions. 2
  • 3. Production Concepts and Mathematical Models Production performance metrics:  Production rate Rp for an individual processing or assembly operation is usually expressed as an hourly rate, that is, number of work units completed per hour (pc/hr).  Cycle time Tc is defined as the time that one work unit spends being processed or assembled. It is the time between when one work unit begins processing or assembly and when the next unit begins. 3
  • 4. Production Concepts and Mathematical Models Production performance metrics:  Production capacity PC  Utilization U  Availability A  Manufacturing lead time MLT  Work-in-progress WIP 4
  • 5. Operation Cycle Time Typical cycle time for a production operation: Tc = To + Th + Tth where Tc = cycle time (min/pc), To = processing time for the operation (min/pc), Th = handling time (min/pc) (e.g., loading and unloading the production machine), and Tth = tool handling time (min/pc) (e.g., time to change tools) 5
  • 6. Production Rate (batch/job shop/flow) Batch production: Batch time Tb = Tsu + QTc where Tb= batch processing time (min) Tsu= setup time to prepare for the batch (min) Q= batch quantity (pc) Tc = cycle time per work unit (min/cycle) Average production time per work unit Tp Tp = Tb/Q= Tsu/Q + Tc Hourly production rate Rp = 60/Tp 6
  • 7. Production Rate (batch/job shop/flow) Job shop production: For Q = 1, Tp = Tsu + Tc For Q > 1, Tp is determined as in batch production Mass production: Rp  Rc = 60/Tc since Tsu/Q  0 (Q is very large) where Rc = operation cycle rate of the machine (pc/hr) Tc = operation cycle time (min/pc) 7
  • 8. Production Rate (batch/job shop/flow) Flow line production: Bottleneck station is the station with the largest operation time (with highest utilization) Tc = Tr + Max To Tc = cycle time of the production line (min/cycle) Tr = time to transfer work units between workstations each cycle (min/cycle) Max To = operation time at the bottleneck station (min/cycle) Rc = 60/Tc Rc = theoretical (ideal) production rate (cycles/hr) 8
  • 9. Production Capacity “Max rate of output that a production facility is able to produce under a given set of assumed operating conditions” Operating conditions:  Number of shifts per day  Number of days per week  Employment levels A work center is a manufacturing system in the plant typically consisting of one worker and one machine. 9
  • 10. Production Capacity Plant capacity for facility in which parts are made in one operation (no = 1): PC = n Sw Hsh Rp where PC = weekly plant capacity (units/wk) n = number of work centers working in parallel Sw = number of shifts per week Hsh = hr/shift Rp = hourly production rate of each work center (output units/hr) 10
  • 11. Production Capacity Plant capacity for facility in which parts require multiple operations (no > 1): PCw = where no = number of operations in the routing w sh p o nS H R n 11
  • 12. Production Capacity This capacity model assumes that all n machines are producing 100% of the time and there are no bottleneck operations due to variations in process routings to inhibit smooth flow of work through the plant. There are some operations that are fully utilized while other operations occasionally stand idle waiting for work. That is, utilization varies. 12
  • 13. Utilization and Availability Utilization: U = where Q = quantity actually produced, and PC = plant capacity “the amount of output of a production facility relative to its capacity” Utilization can be assessed for an entire plant, a single machine in the plant or any other productive resource. PC Q 13
  • 14. Utilization and Availability Availability: A = where MTBF = mean time between failures, and MTTR = mean time to repair “a common measure for reliability of equipment” MTBF MTTR MTBF  14
  • 15. Availability - MTBF and MTTR Defined 15
  • 16. Manufacturing Lead Time where MLTj = manufacturing lead time for part or product j (min) Tsuji = setup time for operation i (min) Qj = quantity of part or product j in the batch being processed (pc) Tcji = operation cycle time for operation i (min/pc) Tnoji = non-operation time (handling, temporary storage, inspections) associated with operation i (min) “the total time required to process a given part/product through the plant including any lost time due to delays, time spent in storage, reliability problems, and so on”   1 oj n j suji j cji noji i MLT T Q T T      16
  • 17. Manufacturing Lead Time MLT = no (Tsu + QTc + Tno) where MLT = manufacturing lead time, no = number of operations, Tsu = setup time, Q = batch quantity, Tc = cycle time per part, and Tno = non-operation time (handling, temporary storage, inspections) 17
  • 18. Manufacturing Lead Time Job shop when Q=1 MLT = no (Tsu + Tc + Tno) Mass production when Q MLT = no QTc Flow line MLT = no (Tr + Max To) = no Tc 18
  • 19. Work-In-Process WIP = where WIP = work-in-process, pc; A = availability, U = utilization, PC = plant capacity, pc/wk; MLT = manufacturing lead time, wk; Sw = shifts per week, Hsh = hours per shift, hr/shift “quantity of parts or products currently located in the factory that are either being processed or between processing operations” “the inventory in the state of being transformed from raw material to finished product”      w sh w sh AU PC MLT Q MLT S H S H  19
  • 20. Costs of Manufacturing Operations  Two major categories of manufacturing costs: 1. Fixed costs - remain constant for any output level 2. Variable costs - vary in proportion to production output level  Adding fixed and variable costs TC = FC + VC(Q) where TC = total costs, FC = fixed costs (e.g., building, equipment, taxes), VC = variable costs (e.g., labor, materials, utilities), Q = output level. 20
  • 21. Fixed and Variable Costs 21
  • 22. Manufacturing Costs  Alternative classification of manufacturing costs: 1. Direct labor - wages and benefits paid to workers 2. Materials - costs of raw materials 3. Overhead - all of the other expenses associated with running the manufacturing firm  Factory overhead consists of the costs of operating the factory other than direct labor and materials.  Corporate overhead is the cost not related to the company’s manufacturing activities. 22
  • 24. Overhead Rates Factory overhead rate: FOHR = Corporate overhead rate: COHR = where FOHC=annual factory overhead costs ($/yr) COHC= annual corporate overhead costs ($/yr) DLC = annual direct labor costs ($/yr) FOHC DLC DLC COHC 24
  • 25. Example 3.5 Determine a. The factory overhead rate for each plant b. The corporate overhead rate Expense category Plant 1 ($) Plant 2 ($) Headquarters ($) Totals ($) Direct labor 800,000 400,000 1,200,000 Materials 2,500,000 1,500,000 4,000,000 Factory expense 2,000,000 1,100,000 3,100,000 Corporate expense 7,200,000 7,200,000 Totals 5,300,000 3,000,000 7,200,000 15,500,000 25
  • 26. Cost of Equipment Usage Hourly cost of worker-machine system: Co = CL(1 + FOHRL) + Cm(1 + FOHRm) where Co = hourly rate, $/hr; CL = labor rate, $/hr; FOHRL = labor factory overhead rate, Cm = machine rate, $/hr; FOHRm = machine factory overhead rate 26
  • 27. Averaging Procedures for Production Models number of batches of the various part/product styles Q n    1 Average batch quantity batch quantity for part/product style 1,..., Q n j j Q j Q Q Q n Q j j n      27
  • 28. Averaging Procedures for Production Models 1 Average number of operations in the process routing number of operations in the process routing of part/product style Q n oj j o Q oj n n n n j     28
  • 29. Averaging Procedures for Production Models 1 Average setup time for part/product setup time for operation in the processing sequence for part/product style oj n sujk k suj oj sujk j T T n T k j     29
  • 30. Averaging Procedures for Production Models 1 1 Grand average setup time Q Q n oj suj j su n oj j n T T n      30
  • 31. Averaging Procedures for Production Models   1 Average operation cycle time for item cycle time for operation for item 1,2,..., oj n cjk k cj oj cjk oj j T T n T k j k n      31
  • 32. Averaging Procedures for Production Models 1 1 Grand average cycle time for all items Q Q Q n oj cj j c n oj j n n T T n      32
  • 33. Averaging Procedures for Production Models 1 Average nonoperation time for item nonopertion time for operation for item oj n nojk k noj oj nojk j T T n T k j     33
  • 34. Averaging Procedures for Production Models 1 1 Grand average nonoperation time Q Q n oj noj j no n oj j n T T n      34