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Production Processes
Prepared by Yen-Hsiang, Ting
2
 The high-level view of what is required to make something
can be divided into three simple steps.
 Sourcing the part we need
 Making the item
 Sending the item to the customer
 Depending on the item being produced, the supply chain can
be very long with subcontractors and manufacturing plants
spread out over the globe or short where parts are sourced and
the product made locally.
1.Production Processes
3
Exhibit 6.1 Positioning Inventory in the Supply Chain
1.Production Processes
4
1.Production Processes
 A key concept in production processes is the customer order
decoupling point, which determines where inventory is
positioned to allow processes or entities in the supply chain to
operate independently.
 Selection of decoupling points is a strategic decision that
determines customer lead times and can greatly impact
inventory investment.
 There is trade-off where quicker response to customer
demand comes at the expanse of greater inventory investment
because finished goods inventory is more expensive than raw
material inventory.
5
 Firms that serve customers from finished goods inventory are
known as make-to-stock firms.
 Those that combine a number of preassembled modules to
meet a customer’s specifications are called assemble-to-
order firms.
 Those that make the customer’s product from raw materials,
parts, and components are make-to-order firms.
 An engineer-to-order firm will work with the customer to
design the product, and then make it from purchased
materials, parts, and components.
1.Production Processes
6
 The essential issue in satisfying customers in the make-to-
stock environment is to balance the level of finished
inventory against the level of service to the customer.
 The trade-off can be improved by better estimates (or
knowledge) of customer demand, by more rapid
transportation alternatives, by speedier production, and by
more flexible manufacturing.
 Many make-to-stock firms invest in lean manufacturing
programs in order to achieve higher service levels for a
given inventory investment. Ex. Toyota JIT.
1.Production Processes
7
 In the assemble-to-order environment, a primary task is to
define a customer’s order in terms of alternative components
and options since it is these components that are carried in
inventory. Ex. Dell
 The engineering design that enables as much flexibility as
possible in combining components, options, and modules
into finished products.
1.Production Processes
8
 In the make-to-order and engineer-to-order environments the
customer order decoupling point could be in either raw
materials at the manufacturing site or possibly even with the
supplier inventory. Ex. Boeing
1.Production Processes
9
 The need for engineering resources in the engineer-to-order
case is somewhat different than make-to-order since
engineering determines what materials will be required, and
what steps will be required in manufacturing. Depending on
how similar the products are it might not even be possible to
pre-order parts.
 Rather than inventory, the emphasis in these environments
may be more toward managing capacity of critical resources
such as engineering and construction crews.
1.Production Processes
10
 Process selection refers to the strategic decision of selecting
which kind of production processes to use to produce a
product or provide a service.
 For example, in the case of Toshiba notebook computers, if
the volume is very low, we may just have a worker manually
assemble each computer by hand. In contrast, if the volume
is higher, setting up an assembly line is appropriate.
2.How Production Process are Organized
11
 The formats by which a facility is arranged are defined by the
general pattern of work flow; there are five basic structures:
 Project layout: The product (bulk or weight) remains in a fixed
location. Manufacturing equipment is moved to the product
rather than vice versa.
 Workcenter (Job shop): Where similar equipment or functions
are grouped together, and according to the established sequence
of operations, from workcenter to workcenter.
 Manufacturing cell: A dedicated area where products that are
similar in processing requirements are produced. These cells are
designed to perform a specific set of processes, and the cells are
dedicated to a limited range of products.
2.How Production Process are Organized
12
 Assembly line: Work processes are arranged according to the
progressive steps by which the product is made.
 Continuous process: Similar to an assembly line in that
production follows a predetermined sequence of steps, but the
flow is continuous such as with liquids, rather than discrete.
Such structures are usually highly automated.
2.How Production Process are Organized
13
2.How Production Process are Organized
Exhibit 6.2 Product–Process Matrix: Framework Describing Layout Strategies
14
 The choice of which specific equipment to use in a process
often can be based on an analysis of cost trade-offs.
 Less specialized equipment is referred to as “general-
purpose,” meaning that it can be used easily in many different
ways if it is set up in the proper way.
 More specialized equipment, referred to as “special-purpose,”
is often available as an alternative to a general-purpose
machine.
 A standard approach to choosing among alternative
processes or equipment is break-even analysis. A break-even
chart visually presents alternative profits and losses due to
the number of units produced or sold.
3.Break-Even Analysis
15
Ex. Suppose a manufacturer has identified the following options for
obtaining a machined part:
1)It can buy the part at $200 per unit (including materials) negligible fixed
cost
2)It can make the part on a numerically controlled semiautomatic lathe at
$75 per unit (including materials) fixed cost $80,000
3)It can make the part on a machining center at $15 per unit (including
materials) fixed cost $200,000
The total cost for each option is
3.Break-Even Analysis
16
3.Break-Even Analysis
17
 Consider the effect of revenue, assuming the part sells for $300 each
Profit (or loss) is the distance between the revenue line and the alternative
process cost.
 At 1,000 units, for example, maximum profit is the difference between the
$300,000 revenue (point C) and the semiautomatic lathe cost of $155,000
(point D). For this quantity the semiautomatic lathe is the cheapest
alternative available.
3.Break-Even Analysis
18
 Project Layout
 In developing a project layout, visualize the
product as the hub of a wheel, with materials
and equipment arranged concentrically around
the production point in the order of use and
movement difficulty,
 In a project layout, a high degree of task
ordering is common. To the extent that this task
ordering, or precedence, determines production
stages a project layout may be developed by
arranging materials according to their assembly
priority.
4.Designing a Production System
19
 Workcenters
 The most common approach to developing this
type of layout is to arrange workcenters in a
way that optimizes the movement of material.
 A workcenter sometimes is referred to as a
department and is focused on a particular type
of operation.
 In many installations, optimal placement often
means placing workcenters with large amounts
of interdepartmental traffic adjacent to each
other.
4.Designing a Production System
20
 Manufacturing Cell
 A manufacturing cell is formed by allocating
dissimilar machines to cells that are designed to
work on products that have similar shapes and
processing requirements.
 Manufacturing cells are widely used in metal
fabricating, computer chip manufacture, and
assembly work.
4.Designing a Production System
21
 Assembly Line Continuous Process Layouts
 An assembly line is a layout design for the
special purpose of building a product by going
through a progressive set of steps.
 The assembly steps are done in areas referred to
as “stations,” and typically the stations are
linked by some form of material handling
device.
 Assembly-line design used so often by
manufacturing firms around the world. Often
the item being produced by the continuous
process is a liquid or chemical that actually
“flows” through the system
4.Designing a Production System
22
 Manufacturing process flow design is a method to evaluate the
specific processes that raw materials, parts, and subassemblies
follow as they move through the plant.
 The most common production management tools used in
planning and designing the process flow are assembly drawing,
assembly charts, route sheets, and flow process charts.
 Each of these charts is a useful diagnostic tool and can be used to
improve operations during the steady state of the production
system.
5.Manufacturing Process Flow Design
23
Assembly Drawing
5.Manufacturing Process Flow Design
24Assembly Chart
5.Manufacturing Process Flow Design
25Operation and Route Sheet
5.Manufacturing Process Flow Design
26Process Flowchart
5.Manufacturing Process Flow Design
27
 Designing a customer-pleasing product is an art.
 Effective manufacturing process design requires a clear
understanding of what the factory can and cannot do relative to
process structures.
 Frequently a choice exists as to when demand seems likely to
favor a switch from one to the other. Making such decisions also
requires understanding the nuances of each process choice to
determine whether the process really fits new product
specifications.
Summery
Summary

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Production process

  • 2. 2  The high-level view of what is required to make something can be divided into three simple steps.  Sourcing the part we need  Making the item  Sending the item to the customer  Depending on the item being produced, the supply chain can be very long with subcontractors and manufacturing plants spread out over the globe or short where parts are sourced and the product made locally. 1.Production Processes
  • 3. 3 Exhibit 6.1 Positioning Inventory in the Supply Chain 1.Production Processes
  • 4. 4 1.Production Processes  A key concept in production processes is the customer order decoupling point, which determines where inventory is positioned to allow processes or entities in the supply chain to operate independently.  Selection of decoupling points is a strategic decision that determines customer lead times and can greatly impact inventory investment.  There is trade-off where quicker response to customer demand comes at the expanse of greater inventory investment because finished goods inventory is more expensive than raw material inventory.
  • 5. 5  Firms that serve customers from finished goods inventory are known as make-to-stock firms.  Those that combine a number of preassembled modules to meet a customer’s specifications are called assemble-to- order firms.  Those that make the customer’s product from raw materials, parts, and components are make-to-order firms.  An engineer-to-order firm will work with the customer to design the product, and then make it from purchased materials, parts, and components. 1.Production Processes
  • 6. 6  The essential issue in satisfying customers in the make-to- stock environment is to balance the level of finished inventory against the level of service to the customer.  The trade-off can be improved by better estimates (or knowledge) of customer demand, by more rapid transportation alternatives, by speedier production, and by more flexible manufacturing.  Many make-to-stock firms invest in lean manufacturing programs in order to achieve higher service levels for a given inventory investment. Ex. Toyota JIT. 1.Production Processes
  • 7. 7  In the assemble-to-order environment, a primary task is to define a customer’s order in terms of alternative components and options since it is these components that are carried in inventory. Ex. Dell  The engineering design that enables as much flexibility as possible in combining components, options, and modules into finished products. 1.Production Processes
  • 8. 8  In the make-to-order and engineer-to-order environments the customer order decoupling point could be in either raw materials at the manufacturing site or possibly even with the supplier inventory. Ex. Boeing 1.Production Processes
  • 9. 9  The need for engineering resources in the engineer-to-order case is somewhat different than make-to-order since engineering determines what materials will be required, and what steps will be required in manufacturing. Depending on how similar the products are it might not even be possible to pre-order parts.  Rather than inventory, the emphasis in these environments may be more toward managing capacity of critical resources such as engineering and construction crews. 1.Production Processes
  • 10. 10  Process selection refers to the strategic decision of selecting which kind of production processes to use to produce a product or provide a service.  For example, in the case of Toshiba notebook computers, if the volume is very low, we may just have a worker manually assemble each computer by hand. In contrast, if the volume is higher, setting up an assembly line is appropriate. 2.How Production Process are Organized
  • 11. 11  The formats by which a facility is arranged are defined by the general pattern of work flow; there are five basic structures:  Project layout: The product (bulk or weight) remains in a fixed location. Manufacturing equipment is moved to the product rather than vice versa.  Workcenter (Job shop): Where similar equipment or functions are grouped together, and according to the established sequence of operations, from workcenter to workcenter.  Manufacturing cell: A dedicated area where products that are similar in processing requirements are produced. These cells are designed to perform a specific set of processes, and the cells are dedicated to a limited range of products. 2.How Production Process are Organized
  • 12. 12  Assembly line: Work processes are arranged according to the progressive steps by which the product is made.  Continuous process: Similar to an assembly line in that production follows a predetermined sequence of steps, but the flow is continuous such as with liquids, rather than discrete. Such structures are usually highly automated. 2.How Production Process are Organized
  • 13. 13 2.How Production Process are Organized Exhibit 6.2 Product–Process Matrix: Framework Describing Layout Strategies
  • 14. 14  The choice of which specific equipment to use in a process often can be based on an analysis of cost trade-offs.  Less specialized equipment is referred to as “general- purpose,” meaning that it can be used easily in many different ways if it is set up in the proper way.  More specialized equipment, referred to as “special-purpose,” is often available as an alternative to a general-purpose machine.  A standard approach to choosing among alternative processes or equipment is break-even analysis. A break-even chart visually presents alternative profits and losses due to the number of units produced or sold. 3.Break-Even Analysis
  • 15. 15 Ex. Suppose a manufacturer has identified the following options for obtaining a machined part: 1)It can buy the part at $200 per unit (including materials) negligible fixed cost 2)It can make the part on a numerically controlled semiautomatic lathe at $75 per unit (including materials) fixed cost $80,000 3)It can make the part on a machining center at $15 per unit (including materials) fixed cost $200,000 The total cost for each option is 3.Break-Even Analysis
  • 17. 17  Consider the effect of revenue, assuming the part sells for $300 each Profit (or loss) is the distance between the revenue line and the alternative process cost.  At 1,000 units, for example, maximum profit is the difference between the $300,000 revenue (point C) and the semiautomatic lathe cost of $155,000 (point D). For this quantity the semiautomatic lathe is the cheapest alternative available. 3.Break-Even Analysis
  • 18. 18  Project Layout  In developing a project layout, visualize the product as the hub of a wheel, with materials and equipment arranged concentrically around the production point in the order of use and movement difficulty,  In a project layout, a high degree of task ordering is common. To the extent that this task ordering, or precedence, determines production stages a project layout may be developed by arranging materials according to their assembly priority. 4.Designing a Production System
  • 19. 19  Workcenters  The most common approach to developing this type of layout is to arrange workcenters in a way that optimizes the movement of material.  A workcenter sometimes is referred to as a department and is focused on a particular type of operation.  In many installations, optimal placement often means placing workcenters with large amounts of interdepartmental traffic adjacent to each other. 4.Designing a Production System
  • 20. 20  Manufacturing Cell  A manufacturing cell is formed by allocating dissimilar machines to cells that are designed to work on products that have similar shapes and processing requirements.  Manufacturing cells are widely used in metal fabricating, computer chip manufacture, and assembly work. 4.Designing a Production System
  • 21. 21  Assembly Line Continuous Process Layouts  An assembly line is a layout design for the special purpose of building a product by going through a progressive set of steps.  The assembly steps are done in areas referred to as “stations,” and typically the stations are linked by some form of material handling device.  Assembly-line design used so often by manufacturing firms around the world. Often the item being produced by the continuous process is a liquid or chemical that actually “flows” through the system 4.Designing a Production System
  • 22. 22  Manufacturing process flow design is a method to evaluate the specific processes that raw materials, parts, and subassemblies follow as they move through the plant.  The most common production management tools used in planning and designing the process flow are assembly drawing, assembly charts, route sheets, and flow process charts.  Each of these charts is a useful diagnostic tool and can be used to improve operations during the steady state of the production system. 5.Manufacturing Process Flow Design
  • 25. 25Operation and Route Sheet 5.Manufacturing Process Flow Design
  • 27. 27  Designing a customer-pleasing product is an art.  Effective manufacturing process design requires a clear understanding of what the factory can and cannot do relative to process structures.  Frequently a choice exists as to when demand seems likely to favor a switch from one to the other. Making such decisions also requires understanding the nuances of each process choice to determine whether the process really fits new product specifications. Summery Summary

Notas do Editor

  1. 生產商品三步驟 一、採購所需零件 二、製造商品 三、商品寄送給顧客 依據產品特性,當外包商與製造工廠位在海外時(汽車或電腦製造),供應鏈的範疇可能佈及全球;而當零件購自本地時,供應鏈則可能很短。
  2. 零件來自一個或多個供應商,中間是製造步驟,配送步驟則是運送商品給顧客。依據公司策略,製造能力與顧客需求,在符合競爭目標與吸引顧客的前提下,組織上述活動以盡可能降低成本。以DVD或衣服等消費性商品為例,顧客一般希望能有現貨或是在鄰近的商店快速購得,使製造商必須採取存貨生產,並運送至零售商店儲存,等待顧客購買。
  3. 生產流程中一項重要的因素是顧客訂單分界點,關係存貨設置的位置,讓供應鏈的流程或個體保有獨立運作的彈性。 其也是一項策略性決策,決定顧客前置時間的長度,也影響存貨投資的大小。 企業一般就回應顧客需求的速度與存貨投資間進行權衡,因為製成品存貨包含製造成本,因此較原料昂貴。
  4. 當公司以製成品存貨供應顧客時,屬存貨生產。已預先組成的模組,組裝符合顧客規格的商品,為接單裝配。 接單生產則是從原料與零組件完成顧客訂製的產品。接單設計是與顧客共同設計,之後採購原料與零組件以完成生產。 圖5.1公司主要的存貨可以是製成品、半成品、原料,或儲存在供應商處。
  5. 在存貨生產環境下,滿足顧客需求的關鍵,是權衡製成品存貨與顧客服務水準。 權衡結果會陰更精準的顧客需求估計、更快的運輸方式、更具效率與彈性的生產方法獲得改善。 許多存貨公司實施精實製造計畫,以能在既定的存貨投資下提高顧客服務水準。
  6. 接單裝配的公司持有零件存貨,主要工作是根據可用的零件與配件組合定義顧客的訂單。 成功的關鍵即具備高彈性的工程設計能力,以組合零組件完成商品。
  7. 針對接單生產或接單設計的環境,顧客訂單分界點發生在製造工廠的原料存貨,甚至是物料供應商的存貨點。
  8. 針對於工程資源的需求,接單設計不同於接單生產的情況,其工程設計決定生產過程所需的物料與步驟,有些商品甚至無法事先預備零件。 此兩種生產環境的重點在於管理重要資源(如工程或建築人員)的產能,而非存貨的控管。
  9. 流程選擇是決定採用何種流程製造商品或提供服務的策略性決策。 以東芝生產筆電為例,當產量少,採用人工作業進行組裝;當產量大則設置裝配線
  10. 設施佈置的型態可由工作流程的形式來定義,包含五種: 專案佈置:產品(因體積或重量)固定在某個地點上,製造設備需移動至產品所在地。 工作中心:將相同功能的設備集中於同一區域。根據作業順序生產。 製造單元:生產具有相同製造需求商品的特定區域,每個單元設計是執行一組特定的流程,生產特定種類商品。
  11. 裝配線:工作流程按照衣錠的順序完成產品的生產。 連續流程:類似裝配線,生產流程依預定步驟進行,流程為連續而非間斷,通常高度自動化
  12. 產品流程矩陣 橫軸為特定產品或一組同質性產品的產量 縱軸為標準化,代表產品生產的變動程度。 生產量大且高度標準化,使用裝配線或連續流程
  13. 可以成本分析作為流程中特定設備的選擇。低專用性設備經過設定可用於多種不同情況,高專用性則具有特定用途。 損益平衡分析是分析流程或設備方案時的標準方法,顯示不同產量或銷售量對應的利潤或損失。
  14. 某製造商考慮以下方案取得生產所需零件 1.向外購買零件(每單位200) 忽略固定成本 2.數位半自動車床製造(每單位75)固定成本80000 3.加工中心製造(每單位15)固定成本200000
  15. 預期需求超過2000單位(A點),依總成本最小原則,選加工中心(綠線)。 需求介於640~2000,選半自動。 需求小於640,選擇外購。
  16. 假設零件單位售價300,利潤(損失)等於收益線與各流程成本間距離。 生產1000單位,最大利潤為30萬(C點)與半自動車床成本15.5萬(D點)距離,選半自動車床
  17. 專案佈置:由於搬運困難,必須以產品為中心安排物料與設備。 工作順序也是重要因素,決定生產階段、物料依組裝順序安排。
  18. 發展工作中心最普遍方式是以物料搬運的最佳方式為設計基準。 有時可將工作中心視為一個部門。 佈置的最佳方式是將有大量互動的工作中心安排在鄰近的位置。
  19. 製造單元由不同的機器組成,以生產型態或流程需求相似的產品。 廣泛應用在金屬製造、電腦晶片製造與裝配等
  20. 裝配線是循序進行一連串步驟完成特定產品生產的佈置型態,每項步驟的區域稱為“站”,會連結物料處理設備。 裝配線是製造業經常採用的方式,連續流程佈置產品經常是液體或化學物質。
  21. 製造流程設計是指評估工廠內移動原物料、零件或組件等特定流程之方法。 規劃與設計製造流程最常使用的工具有裝配圖、組裝程序圖、途程表、流程圖等。可改善流程與作業
  22. 設計消費者滿意的產品是一門藝術。 有效的流程規劃必須清楚了解工廠流程結構的能力。 當產品改變時,必須重新選擇流程,並了解各個生產流程的細微差異,以判斷流程是否適用。