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CHAPTER 7. Manufacturing Process Selection and Design. Overview. Process Selection Types of Processes Process Flow Structures Product-Process Matrix Break-Even Analysis Manufacturing Process Flow Design. Process Selection. Process and Process Selection.
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CHAPTER 7 Manufacturing Process Selection and Design
Overview • Process Selection • Types of Processes • Process Flow Structures • Product-Process Matrix • Break-Even Analysis • Manufacturing Process Flow Design
Process and Process Selection Process: Any set of activities performed by an organization that takes inputs and transforms them into outputs ideally of greater value to the organization than the original inputs. Process selection refers to the strategic decision of selecting with which kind of production processes to have in the manufacturing plant.
Process Selection Three primary questions: • How much variety in products or services will the system need to handle? • What degree of equipment flexibility will be needed? • What is the expected volume of output?
Types of Processes Based on what they do • Conversion process • Iron ore steel sheets, ingredients of toothpaste toothpaste • Fabrication process: changing raw materials into some specific form • Sheet metal car fender, gold a crown for a tooth, cloth clothes • Assembly process • Assemble parts to components, put toothpaste tubes into a box, fasten a dental crown into someone’s mouth • Testing process • For quality of products
Process Types A process flow structure refers to how a factory organizes material flow using one or more of the process technologies. • Job shop • Batch shop • Assembly Line • Continuous Flow
Job Shop • Job shop: A process structure suited for low-volumeproduction ofa great variety of nonstandard products. • Each job may require a differentset or sequence of processing steps • High flexibility of equipment (General-purpose equipment ) • Skilled workers • Examples: commercial printing firms, copy center making a single copy of a student term paper, airplane manufacturers, machine tool shops, American Chopper
Batch Shop • Batch shop: A process structure that produces a moderate variety of standard productsat relatively low volumes. • A somewhat standardized job shop • Employed when a business has a relatively stable line of products • The products are produced periodically in batches to reduce the impact of setup time on equipment • The equipment need NOT be as flexible as in a job shop • The skill level of workers need NOT to be as high as in a job shop • Examples: • Bakeries: make bread, cakes, cookies in batches; • Movie theatre: shows movies to groups (batches) of people; • Airlines: carry batches of people from airport to airport; • Other examples: production of beer, book, magazine, etc
Assembly Line • Assembly line (Repetitive processing): A process structure designed to make discrete parts moving through a set of specially designed workstations at a controlled rate. • High volume • Standardized products • Slight flexibility of equipment • Skill of workers is usually low • Examples: manual assembly of toys and appliances, automatic assembly of components on a printed circuit board, production line (automobiles, computers, etc.)
Continuous Flow • Continuous flow: An often automated process structure that converts raw materials into finished product in one continuous process. • Highly standardized products, no variety • Special-purpose equipment (no need for equipment flexibility) • Skill of workers is low • Examples: petroleum, steel, sugar, flour, and salt
Product-Process Matrix • Choice of process flow structure is based on two main considerations: • Variety—how much the product changes from customer to customer; • Volume of demand. • Product-process matrix: Shows the relationship between process structures and product volume and variety characteristics. • As volume increases and the product line narrows, specialized equipment and standardized material flows become economically feasible. (see next slide)
Product-Process Matrix Exhibit 7.1 High Variety Low Low Volume High
Break-Even Analysis • A standard approach to choosing among alternative processes or equipment. • Most suitable when processes and equipment entail a large initial investment and fixed cost, and when variable costs are reasonably proportional to the number of units produced. • Break-even Point (BEP) • One option case: determine the point in units (produced and sold) at which total cost = total revenue. • Multiple options case: determine the points in units at which one option is indifferent to another.
Cost-Volume Relationships (Total Cost) Amount ($) Total cost = VC + FC Variable cost (VC) Fixed cost (FC) 0 Q (Quantity in units) Total cost (TC) = Fixed cost (FC) + Variable cost (VC) = Fixed cost (FC) + Unit cost (v) XQuantity (Q)
Revenue-Volume Relationships (Total Revenue) Total revenue Amount ($) 0 Q (Quantity in units) Total revenue=Revenue per unit (R) XQuantity (Q)
Cost-Volume Relationships (BEP) + Profit Total revenue Amount ($) Total cost - Loss 0 BEP Q (volume in units) Break-even point (BEP): the quantity of output at which total cost and total revenue are equal.
One-Option Case Find out the quantity that makes: Total Revenue (TR) = Total Cost (TC) Total Revenue = Total Fixed Cost + Total Variable Cost Unit Revenue* Units = Total Fixed Cost + Unit Cost* Units R * Q = FC + v * Q Break Even Quantity: QBEP = FC / (R – v) Profit (margin) = Total Revenue – Total Cost
Example -- One-Option Case Suppose you want to purchase a new computer that will cost $5,000. It will be used to process written orders from customers who will pay $25 each for the service. The cost of labor, electricity and the form used to place the order is $5 per customer. • How many customers will we need to serve to permit the total revenue to break-even with our costs? FC = $5,000, R = $25/customer, v = $5/customer Break-even quantity QBEP: = FC /(R-v) = 5,000/(25-5) = 250 customers • How many customers should we serve to make a profit of $1,000? Profit = Total Revenue – Total Cost = R * Q – (FC + v * Q) = (R-v) * Q - FC 1,000 = (25-5) * Q – 5,000 Q = 300 customers
Example -- Multiple-Option Case (page 207) Suppose a manufacturer has identified the following options for obtaining a machined part: 1. purchase the part $200/unit, no fixed cost 2. make the part on a semiautomatic lathe $75/unit, fixed cost = $80,000 3. make the part on a machining center $15/unit, fixed cost = $200,000 Which option should the manufacturer choose? TC_buy = 200 * Q TC_lathe = 80,000 + 75 * Q TC_machine = 200,000 + 15 * Q
Minimum cost TC_buy TC_Machine A TC_Lathe B Example -- Multiple-Option Case (page 207) Demand < B Buy B < Demand < A Semiautomatic Lathe Demand >A Machine center
Example -- Multiple-Option Case (page 207) • Break-even point B: Total cost of “buy” = Total cost of “Make on lathe” 200 x Demand = 80,000 + 75 x Demand DemandB = 80,000/(200-75) =640 units • Break-even point A: Total cost of “Make on lathe” = Total cost of “Make on machine” 80,000 + 75 x Demand = 200,000 + 15 x Demand DemandA= (200,000- 80,000)/(75-15) =2,000 units
Manufacturing Process Flow Design • A process flow design can be defined as a mapping of the specific processes that raw materials, parts, and subassemblies follow as they move through a plant. • The most common tools to conduct a process flow design include assembly drawings, assembly charts, operation and route sheets, and process flowcharts.
Assembly Drawing • An assembly drawing is simply an exploded view of the product showing its component parts. Plug assembly drawing
Assembly Chart • An assembly chart uses the information presented in the assembly drawing and defines how parts go together, their order of assembly, and often the overall material flow pattern. Assembly chart for plug assembly
Operation and Route Sheet • An operation and route sheet specifies operations and process routing for a particular part. It conveys such information as the type of equipment, tooling, and operations required to complete the part. Operation and route sheet for plug assembly
Process Flowchart • A process flowchart denotes what happens to the product as it processes through the productive facility. Process flowchart for plug housing
Recap • Product-process matrix • Break-even point (BEP) • One-option case • Multiple-option case • Manufacturing process flow design • Process • Process selection • Types of processes • Process flow structures • Job shop • Batch shop • Assembly line • Continuous flow