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ISQS 3344 Introduction to Production and Operations Management Spring 2012

ISQS 3344 Introduction to Production and Operations Management Spring 2012. Quantitative Review II. Taguchi Loss Function (p.199). Design the product or service so that it will not be sensitive to variations during the manufacturing or delivery process

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ISQS 3344 Introduction to Production and Operations Management Spring 2012

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  1. ISQS 3344 Introduction to Production andOperations ManagementSpring 2012 Quantitative Review II

  2. Taguchi Loss Function (p.199) • Design the product or service so that it will not be sensitive to variations during the manufacturing or delivery process • For example, design a manufactured good with a smaller design tolerance = better quality

  3. Taguchi Loss Function where L(x) = the monetary value of the loss associated with deviating from the target limit “T” k = the constant that translates the deviation into dollars x = the actual value of the dimension T = target limits

  4. A quality characteristic has a specification (in inches) of 0.200  0.020. If the value of the quality characteristic exceeds 0.200 by the tolerance of 0.020 on either side, the product will require a repair of $150. Develop the appropriate Taguchi loss function (k).

  5. A quality engineer has a manufacturing specification (in cm) of 0.200 plus or minus 0.050. Historical data indicates that if the quality characteristic takes on values larger than .250 cm or smaller than .150 cm, the product fails and a cost of $75 is incurred. Determine the Taguchi Loss Function and estimate the loss for a dimension of 0.135 cm.

  6. Reliability Management (pp.651-654) • Series product components • Parallel product components

  7. The manufacturing of compact disks requires four sequential steps. The reliability of each of the steps is 0.96, 0.87, 0.92, and 0.88 respectively. What is the reliability of the process?

  8. The system reliability for a two-component parallel system is 0.99968. If the reliability of the first component is 0.99, determine the reliability of the second component. 0.99968 = 1 – (1 – 0.99)(1 – p2) 0.99968 = 1 – (0.01 – 0.01p2) 0.99968–1 = -0.01 + 0.01p2 p2 = 0.968

  9. Redundancy B .91 A C .98 .97 B .91

  10. Given the diagram below, determine the system reliability if the individual component reliabilities are: A = 0.94, B = 0.92, C = 0.97, and D = 0.93. C A D B RaRb = 1 - (1 - 0.94)(1 - 0.92) = 0.9952 RcRd = 1 - (1 - 0.97)(1 - 0.93) = 0.9979 RabRcd = (0.9952)(0.9979) = 0.9931

  11. Kanban (pp.632-634) where: K = the number of Kanban cards d = the average production rate OR demand of product p = the processing time w = the waiting time of Kanban cards α = safety stock as a %, usually ranging from 0 to 1 C = the capacity of a standard container

  12. Computing the number of kanbans: An aspirin manufacturer has converted to JIT manufacturing using Kanban containers. They wish to determine the number of containers at the bottle filling operation which fills at a rate of 400 per hour. Each container holds 35 bottles, it takes 30 minutes to receive more bottles (processing plus delivery time) and safety stock is set at 10%. d = 400 bottles per hour p+w = 30 minutes or 0.5 hour C = 35 bottles per container α = 0.10

  13. Location Analysis Methods (Chapter 8) 2*10= 5*10= 2*20= 4*20= 5*30= 2*30= 3*10= 5*10= 5*30= 3*30= Factor Rating Method (pp.319-320): Σ (Factor Weighti * Factor Scorei)

  14. Location Analysis Methods Center-of-Gravity Method (pp.322-323): where dix = x-coordinate of location i diy = y-coordinate of location i Qi = Quantity of goods moved to or from location i

  15. Center-of-Gravity Method Where would be the best place to put the warehouse?

  16. Location Analysis Methods Load Distance Model: Find load distance score by: Calculate the rectilinear distance and multiply by the number of loads

  17. Load Distance Model Calculate Rectilinear Distance Identify Loads, i.e., 4 loads from A to B Load Distance Score for AB = 45*4 = 180

  18. TT Logistics Co. has just signed a contract to deliver products to three locations, and they are trying to decide where to put their new warehouse. The three delivery locations are A, B, and C. The two potential sites for the warehouse are D and E. The total quantity to be delivered to each destination is: 200 to A, 100 to B, and 300 to C. The x, y coordinates for the delivery locations and warehouses are as follows: Where to locate warehouse, D or E?

  19. Load Distance Score Warehouse D Distance Loads Score Location A 2+3=5 200 1000 Location B 10+5=15 100 1500 Location C 0+10=10 300 3000 5500 Warehouse E Distance Loads Score Location A 2+2=4 200 800 Location B 10+0=10 100 1000 Location C 0+5=5 300 1500 3300

  20. Designing Process Layouts (Chapter 9) • Step 1: Gather information • Space needed, space available, importance of proximity between various units • Step 2: Develop alternative block plans • Using trial-and-error or decision support tools • Step 3: Develop a detailed layout • Consider exact sizes and shapes of departments and work centers including aisles and stairways • Tools like drawing, 3-D models, and CAD software are available to facilitate this process.

  21. Process Layout (Step 1: Gather information) Recovery First Sports Medicine Clinic Layout (total space 3750 sq.ft.)

  22. Process Layout (Step 2: Develop a block layout) Proposed layout would require less walking. Current Proposed

  23. Load Distance Problem What is the load distance for this layout? Trips between departments

  24. Load Distance Problem

  25. Assembly Line Balancing (Chapter 9) Step 1: Identify task & immediate predecessors Step 2: Calculate the cycle time Step 3: Determine the output rate Step 4: Compute the theoretical minimum number of workstations Step 5: Assign tasks to workstations (balance the line) Step 6: Compute efficiency, idle time & balance delay

  26. Assembly Line Balancing(Step 1: Identify tasks & immediate predecessors)

  27. Layout Calculation • Step 2: Determine cycle time (The amount of time each workstation is allowed to complete its tasks.) • Cycle time = Station A (50 seconds) -- the bottleneck • Step 3: Determine output rate • Step 4: Compute the theoretical minimum number of workstations (number of station needed to achieve 100% efficiency)

  28. Assembly Line Balancing(Step 5: Balance the line) 55 sec 55 sec 55 sec 3 Work Stations (A,B), (C,D,G), (E,F,H,I)

  29. Assembly Line Balancing(Step 6: Compute efficiency, idle time & balance delay) • Efficiency • Balance Delay • Balance Delay = 1 – Assembly Line Efficiency

  30. Line Balancing Problem 3.4 mins B 2.3 mins E 2.7 mins A C 4.1 mins D 1.6 mins F 3.3 mins G 2.6 mins What is the bottleneck? What is the maximum production per hour? What is efficiency and balance delay? How to minimize work stations? How should they be groups? New efficiency?

  31. Line Balancing Problem • What is the bottleneck? • 4.1 minutes • What is the maximum production per hour? • 60/4.1 = 14.63 units/hour • What is efficiency and balance delay? • Efficiency = 20/(7*4.1) = 69.69% • Balance Delay = 1-.6969 = 30.31% • How to minimize work stations? • Should we use 4 or 5 work stations?

  32. 4 Work Stations Efficiency = 20/(4*6) = 20/24 = 83.3% Balance delay = 1-.833 = 16.7% Maximum production/hour = 60/6 = 10 units/hour 3.4 mins B 5.7 mins 2.3 mins E 2.7 mins 6 mins A C 4.1 mins D 1.6 mins F 3.3 mins G 2.6 mins 2.6 mins 5.7 mins

  33. 5 Work Stations Efficiency = 20/(5*5.7) = 20/28.5 = 70.18% Balance delay = 1-.7018 = 29.82% Maximum production/hour = 60/5.7 = 10.52 units/hour 3.4 mins B 5.7 mins 2.3 mins E 2.7 mins 2.7 mins A C 4.1 mins 4.1 mins D 1.6 mins F 3.3 mins G 2.6 mins 2.6 mins 4.9 mins

  34. Should we use 4 or 5 or 7 work stations? • 4 Work Stations • Efficiency = 83.3% • Balance delay = 16.7% • Maximum production/hour = 10 units/hour • 5 Work Stations • Efficiency = 70.18% • Balance delay = 29.82% • Maximum production/hour = 10.52 units/hour • 7 Work Stations • Efficiency = 69.69% • Balance delay = 30.31% • Maximum production/hour = 14.63 units/hour

  35. Supply Chain Efficiency • Measuring Cash to Conversion Cycle • Inventory Turnover(IT) • Inventory Days’ Supply(IDS) • Accounts Receivable Turnover(ART) • Accounts Receivable Days’ Supply(ARDS) • Accounts Payable Turnover(APT) • Accounts Payable Days’ Supply(APDS) Cash-to-Cash Conversion Cycle = IDS + ARDS - APDS

  36. Inventory Ratios • Inventory Turnover(IT): # of times you turn your inventory annually • Inventory Days’ Supply(IDS): how many days inventory you keep

  37. Accounts Receivable Ratios Accounts Receivable Turnover(ART): # of times you turn your accts. rec. annually Accounts Receivable Days’ Supply(ARDS): how long it takes to get $ owed paid to you

  38. Accounts Payable Ratios Accounts Payable Turnover(APT): # of times you turn your accts. payable annually Accounts Payable Days’ Supply(APDS): how long you take to pay your bills

  39. Dell’s Financial data Revenue $35.40 billions Cost of goods sold $29.10 billions Average Inventory Value $0.306 billions Average Accounts Receivable $2.586 billions Average Accounts Payable $5.989 billions

  40. Dell’s Example Dell’s Inventory Turnover Dell’s Inventory Days’ Supply

  41. Dell’s Example Dell’s Accounts Receivable Turnover Dell’s Accounts Receivable Days’ Supply

  42. Dell’s Example Dell’s Accounts Payable Turnover Dell’s Accounts Payable Days’ Supply

  43. Dell’s Example Dell’s Cash-to-Cash Conversion Cycle = IDS + ARDS – APDS = 3.84 days + 26.66 days – 61.76 days = -31.26 days The negative value means that Dell receives customers’ payments (accounts receivable) 31.26 days, on average, before Dell has to pay its suppliers (accounts payable). This means that Dell’s value chain is a self-funding cash model.

  44. Dell’s Negative Cash-to-Cash Conversion Cycle

  45. Breakeven Analysis(Make/Buy Decision) Total Cost of Outsourcing: Total Cost of Insourcing: Indifference Point:

  46. The Bagel Shop Problem • Jim & John plan to open a small bagel shop. • The local baker has offered to sell them bagels at 50 cents each. However, they will need to invest $2,000 in bread racks to transport the bagels back and forth from the bakery to their store. • Alternatively, they can bake the bagels at their store for 20 cents each if they invest $20,000 in kitchen equipment. • They expect to sell 80,000 bagels each year. • What should they do?

  47. The Bagel Shop Problem Indifference Point Calculation:

  48. The Bagel Shop Problem Make vs Buy Decision at 80,000 bagels Outsource (Buy)In House (Make) $2,000+($.5*80,000) $20,000+($.2*80,000) = $42,000 = $36,000 Make vs Buy Decision at 50,000 bagels Outsource (Buy)In House (Make) $2,000+($.5*50,000) $20,000+($.2*50,000) = $27,000 = $30,000 If the demand is lower than the indifference point, outsourcing is a cheaper alternative, and vice versa.

  49. That’s all, folks! Good Luck!

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