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Warehouse Concepts. McHugh Software International. Warehouse Basics. What is a Warehouse?. A facility that Receives items from a source Stores items until required Picks items when required Ships items to the appropriate user. Warehouse Objectives. Improve customer service
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Warehouse Concepts McHugh Software International
What is a Warehouse? • A facility that • Receives items from a source • Stores items until required • Picks items when required • Ships items to the appropriate user
Warehouse Objectives • Improve customer service • Efficient use of space • Effective use of equipment • Efficient use of labor • Accessibility of all items • Protection of all items
Types of Warehouses • Manufacturing Warehouse • Distribution Centers • Parts/Catalog/Retail/Consumer products • Cross-dock facilities • LTL Break Bulk Centers/Pool Distributors/Retail Flow-Thru Centers • Storage Warehouses (3rd Party/Contract) • Return Centers/Repair Centers
Material Flow in Logistics Chain • Raw material, parts and components • Initial processing/create subassemblies • Manufacturing process or assembly • Finished items inventory • Distribution to Warehouse and Wholesalers • Retailers • Customers
Items • Item Numbers • An unique product identified by a numbering system. • Referred to as SKU, UPC, part number, or material number
Locations • Uniquely addressed position within the Warehouse used for the storage, staging or manipulation of product
Pallet Storage • Load characteristics play a big role in selection of the type of storage • Dimensions • Weight • Stackability • Storage limitations • Flammable • Refrigerator • Frozen • Warm
Pallet Storage • Types of storage modules • Floor storage • Rack storage • Selective rack (single deep) • Double deep rack • Drive-in or Drive-through rack • Flow rack • Choice based on nature of product and volume
Non-Pallet Storage • Case flow rack • Shelves • Bins • Drawers • Automated picking systems
Vehicles • Many variations of fork trucks • Storage configuration and nature of picking determines type of vehicles to use • Discuss: • Vehicle variations • Configuration variations • Options
Vehicle Variations • Hand truck / hand jack • Manual or powered • Walkie rider • Counterbalanced fork truck • Reach, double reach truck • Turret truck • Order picker
Warehouse Physicals • Storage systems • Pallet storage • Non-pallet storage • Vehicles
Configuration Variations • Rack selection and layout may vary due to space limitations • Three standard layout variants • Conventional - 12 foot aisle • Narrow aisle - 8 to 9 foot aisle • Very narrow aisle - 5 to 6 foot aisle
Conventional Layout • 12 foot aisles • Counter balance fork trucks • Least expensive equipment • Limited to four or five levels high
Narrow Aisle Layout • 8 foot aisles • Use reach truck • Tight turning radius • Also need fork trucks for work in other areas of the facility • Limited to four or five levels high
Very Narrow Aisle Layout • 6 foot aisles • Use turret truck • Usually wire guided • Can get very expensive • Also need fork trucks for work in other areas of the facility • Limit now up to nine levels high
Layout Comparison • Space to hold 1000 pallets • Conventional 10,000 SF • Narrow aisle 6,470 SF • NA with double deep rack 5,500 SF • Very narrow aisle 3,070 SF
Options and Attachments • Poles for carpet • Drum pickers • Slip sheet • Clamps • Double long forks • Double wide forks
Automation • Five areas of automation use • External receiving • Production receiving • Transportation • Storage and picking • Outbound
Production Receiving Automation • Palletizers • Traditional (Alvey style) and robotic
Transportation Automation • AGV’s (automated guided vehicles) • Tugs, mules, tow carts
Outbound Automation • Conveyors • Belt conveyor for pick-to-belt • Extendable • Accumulation • Other