Title: Different Production Systems
1Different Production Systems
- There are three basic production control systems
that are being practiced today - 1. Push Systems (MRP, MRP II)
- 2. Pull Systems (Kanban, Conwip)
- 3. Mixed production systems (pull/push and
push/pull systems)
2Pull Systems of Production
- In order to achieve successful quality, cost, and
delivery ( customer satisfaction) in our
manufacturing system, we must have three major
systems in place - 1. Total Quality Control (or TQM)
- 2. Total Productive Maintenance and
- 3. Just-in-time (JIT) production
3Single Card Kanban Control
Material Flow
1
2
3
4
Order Signal (pull)
Operation
WIP
4CONWIP
Material Flow (push)
1
2
3
4
Order Signal (pull)
Operation
WIP
5Push Production Systems
- Many companies today plan and control their
manufacturing operations with information system
based on MRP (materials requirements planning) or
its successor, MRP II (manufacturing resource
planning).
6Push Production Systems
- MRP in general is called a push system
referring to the common image of in-process
inventory being pushed from one work center to
the next after completion of a work order. - Push systems plan production based on forecasted
demand in batches. - Alternatively they are also called made to stock
planning and control systems.
7Push Production Systems
8Pull Production Systems
9CONWIP
- CONWIP (CONstant Work In Process) is an
alternative to Kanban where a new job is
introduced into the line only if a job leaves the
line. - The system operates based on the principle that a
departing job out of the line sends a production
card back to the beginning of the line to
authorize the release of a new job.
10CONWIP
Material Flow (push)
1
2
3
4
Order Signal (pull)
Operation
WIP
11CONWIP
- Estimating the card count (Littles Formula)
- No. of Cards (WIP) Demand x Cycle Time / Batch
Size
12CONWIP
- From a modeling perspective, a CONWIP system
looks like a closed queuing network, in which
customers (jobs) never leave the system but
instead circulate around the network
indefinitely.
13Kanban
- The card signaling system used in Toyota, which
is considered the classic pull system for JIT
manufacturing. - Common practice in pull production is to use
standard-sized containers for holding and moving
parts.
14Necessary Conditions for Pull Production Systems
- 1. More planning and responsibility must reside
in the hands of supervisors and worker teams. - 2. The goal must be to produce to meet demand.
- 3. Focus and motivation is to reduce WIP.
- 4. TPM must be ongoing.
- 5. TQC must be ongoing (process monitor, SPC,
source inspection, poka-yoke, and autonomation) - 6. Setup times must be small (SMED)
- 7. Leveled/mixed production must be used.
- 8. Flow production must be implemented.
- 9. Cooperative work attitudes and team work
should be ongoing.
15Pull System as a Fixed Quantity Reorder System
- The pull system is, in effect, a variant of the
simple reorder-point system where a
replenishment order is placed whenever inventory
falls to a critical level.
16Pull System as a Fixed Quantity Reorder System
- The formula for re-order point is
- Re-order Point Demand x (Lead-Time) Safety
Stock - where,
- lead time (time between order and replenishment)
processing time conveyance time
17Pull System as a Fixed Quantity Reorder System
- Example Suppose demand for an item is 105 units
per week given a 5-day week, demand is 21 units
per day. If production time is 0.1 day and the
conveyance time is 0.4 days, what is the desired
Re-order Point (ROP)?
ROP 21(0.1 0.4) 10.5 ? 11 units Question
What happened to Safety Stock?
18Pull System as a Fixed Quantity Reorder System
- ROP estimated in terms of containers is
- Maximum of full containers in a buffer Demand
x (Production time Conveyance time) /Container
size
19Pull System as a Fixed Quantity Reorder System
- Example Same as the previous problem. Additional
information is that each container holds three
units. What is the number of containers (K) to
order each time?
Answer K 21(0.1 0.4) / 3 3.5 ?
4 containers
20Pull System Container Size Determination
- Containers size in a pull system is estimated by
a rule of thumb, that a container should have the
capacity to hold about 10 of the daily demand
for the material it holds. -
21Single Card Kanban Control
Material Flow
1
2
3
4
Order Signal (pull)
Operation
WIP
22Kanban Post
23Kanban Card Calculations
- The following simple formula is used in
estimating the number of Kanban cards at a
station - Parts consumed during 1 Kanban cycle
- No. of Kanbans
- Number of parts per container
- Where
- Parts consumed Average
demand x (1?) x (kanban cycle time)during 1
Kanban cycle
24Simple Pull System
- Example Let unit processing time be 0.1 days,
demand be 21 units per day and the container size
be 3 units. Furthermore, the stations are next to
each other so that conveyance time is assumed to
be zero. What is the required number of cards for
this Kanban system?
K (21(0.1)/3 0.7 ? 1 card.Question what
happened to ? ?
25Kanban Card CalculationsProduction Kanban with
Constant Reorder Quantity
- CT Kanban Cycle Time
- Kanban waiting time in receiving post
- Kanban transfer time to ordering post
- Kanban waiting time in ordering post
- Lot processing cycle (internal setup run
time in- process waiting time) - Container transfer time to final buffer
- Container waiting time in the final buffer
- No. of Cards Demand x (1 ?) x Cycle
Time/Parts in a container -
26Kanban Card CalculationsProduction Kanban with
Constant Reorder Quantity
- Example
- Kanban waiting time in receiving post 15
minutes - Kanban transfer time to ordering post 0.5
minutes - Kanban waiting time in ordering post 0.5
minutes - Internal setup 6 minutes
- Run time 3 minutes/unit
- In-process waiting time) 0 minute
- Container transfer time to final buffer 0
minute - Container waiting time in the final buffer 17
minutes - Container size 3 units
- Determine the number of Kanban cards.
27Kanban Card CalculationsProduction Kanban with
Constant Reorder Quantity
- Answer Assume that 1 day is 480 minutesP
150.50.5(63(3)0)017/4800.1 day - so
- K 21(0.1)/3 0.7 ? 1 card.
Question What happened to ? ? How much safety
factor did we build in by using K 1 ?
Answer (1-0.7)/0.7 43
28Kanban Card CalculationsWithdrawal Kanban with
Constant Reorder Quantity
- CT Kanban Cycle Time
- Kanban waiting time in receiving post
- Kanban conveyance time to upstream buffer
- Container conveyance time to downstream buffer
- Container waiting time in downstream buffer
- No. of Cards Demand x (1 ?) x Cycle Time/Parts
in a container -
29Kanban Card CalculationsWithdrawal Kanban with
Constant Reorder Quantity
- Example same data as before, this time
- Kanban waiting time in receiving post 15
minutes - Kanban conveyance time to upstream buffer 10
minutes - Container conveyance time to downstream buffer
120 minutes - Container waiting time in downstream buffer
25 minutes - What is the number of withdrawal cards needed?
-
Answer CT 151012025 170 minutes 0.354
days. K 21(0.354) / 3 2.48 ? 3
cards. Question How much safety factor did we
have?
Answer (3 - 2.47)/2.48 20.1
30Kanban Card CalculationsSupplier Kanban with
Constant Order Cycle
- CT Kanban Cycle Time
- Negotiated delay (lead time in hours)
- Kanban conveyance time to supplier
- Truck waiting time at supplier plant
- Material conveyance time from supplier to
company - No. of Cards Demand x (1 ?) x Cycle
Time/Parts in a container -
31Kanban Card CalculationsSupplier Kanban with
Constant Order Cycle
- Example same as before, in addition
- Negotiated delay (lead time in hours) 36
hours - Kanban conveyance time to supplier 4 hours
- Truck waiting time at supplier plant 2 hours
- Material conveyance time from supplier to
company 4 hours - What is the needed supplier kanban cards?
-
CT 36424 46 hours 1.5 days K 21(1.5)/3
10.5 ? 11 cards
32Kanban Card CalculationsSignal Kanban for Lot
Production
- CT Kanban Cycle Time
- Kanban waiting time in receiving post
- Kanban transfer time to ordering post
- Kanban waiting time in ordering post
- Lot processing cycle (internal setup run
time in- process waiting time) - Container transfer time to final buffer
- No. of Cards Demand x (1 ?) x Cycle Time/Parts
in a container -
33Factory Physics
- Bottleneck rate rate of the process center with
the least long term capacity. - Raw process time sum of the long-term average
process times of each workstation in the line. - Critical WIP level The smallest level of WIP,
where the maximum line productivity is achieved
(at the maximum bottleneck rate).
34Factory Physics
- Throughput TH the average output of a
production process. - Capacity of a station upper limit in its
throughput. - Work in process (WIP) the inventory between the
start and the end points of a production routing.
All the products between, but not including the
stock points. - Cycle time (CT) average time from release of a
job at the beginning of a routing to until it
reaches an inventory point at the end of the
routing. I.e., the time the part spends as WIP.
It is more difficult to define this for the
entire product.
35Factory PhysicsLittle's Law
- The Little's law provides the fundamental
relationship between WIP, cycle time (CT), and
throughput (TH). - Law 1. (Little's law)
- Throughput WIP/Cycle Time
- or
- Cycle Time WIP/Throughput
- It turns out that this law is valid for all
production lines, not just those with zero
variability. Moreover, it also applies to a
single machine, a line or the entire factory.
Some important uses of the Little's law follows.
36Factory Physics Cycle time reduction
- From
- Cycle Time WIP/Throughput
- we deduce that reducing cycle time implies
reducing WIP provided that the throughput remains
the same. Hence large queues are a sign of
opportunity to improve cycle time as well as WIP.
37Factory Physics Law 2 (Best case performance)
- The minimum cycle time (CTbest) for a given WIP
level, w, is given by - ? T0 , if w ? W0
- CTbest ?
- ? w/rb , otherwise
- The maximum throughput (THbest) for a given WIP
level, w, is given by - ? w/T0 , if w ? W0
- THbest ?
- ? rb , otherwise
38Factory Physics Law 3 (Worst Case Performance)
- The worst case cycle time for a given WIP level,
w, is given by - CTworst wT0
- The worst case throughput for a given WIP level,
w, is given by - THworst 1/T0
39Factory Physics Law 4 (Variability)
- In steady state, increasing variability always
increase average cycle times and WIP levels.
40Factory Physics Law 5 (Variability placement)
- Variability early in a routing has a larger
impact on WIP and cycle times than equivalent
variability later in the routing.
41Factory Physics Law 6 (Move batches)
- Cycle time over a segment of routing are roughly
proportional to the move batch sizes used over
that segment.
42Factory Physics Law 7 (Process batches)
- In stations with significant setups
- 1. The minimum process batch size that yields a
stable system may be greater than one. - 2. As process batch size becomes large, cycle
time grows proportionally with batch size. - 3. If setup times are long enough, there will be
a process batch size greater than one for which
the average cycle time is minimized.
43Factory Physics Law 8 (Pay me now or pay me
later)
- If you can not pay for variability reduction, you
will pay in one or more of the following ways - 1. Long cycle times and high WIP levels.
- 2. Wasted capacity (low utilization of
resources). - 3. Lost throughput.
- 4. Unhappy customers.
44Factory Physics Law 9 (Lead-time)
- The manufacturing lead-time for a routing that
yields a given service level is an increasing
function of both the mean and variance of the
cycle time of the routing.
45Factory Physics Law 10 (CONWIP Efficiency)
- For a given level of throughput, a push system
will have more WIP on average than an equivalent
CONWIP system. - Corollary For a given level of throughput, a
push system will have longer average cycle times
than an equivalent CONWIP system.
46Factory Physics Law 11 (CONWIP robustness)
- A CONWIP system is more robust to errors in WIP
level than a pure push system is to errors in
release rate.
47Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- The DBR technique is first used in the OPT
software developed by Eliyahu Goldratt, the
father of the TOC. - The main idea of DBR is based on bottleneck
scheduling and the Theory of Constraint (TOC). - The goal is to schedule the bottleneck for full
utilization and subordinate the rest of the
system to the needs of the bottleneck.
48Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- One way to insure the continuous operation of the
bottleneck is to use a CONWIP mechanism from the
beginning of the line, up to and including the
bottleneck (the pull side). - Push the material downstream once it passes the
bottleneck (the push side). - Therefore, the DBR system is a mixed pull/push
control system.
49Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- Each order is scheduled to depart the bottleneck
at such time that, if unimpeded from there on,
will arrive at the customers hand just in
time. - All planned orders with known due dates are
scheduled to depart from the bottleneck as
described above by using the following formula - depart time order due date - (sum of all
remaining operations after the bottleneck)
50Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- In order to schedule the jobs following the
bottleneck, they are made available to the
downstream operation immediately (i.e., pushed). - This pushing is continued until each jobs
earliest arrival times to downstream stations are
calculated. - Once these times are at hand, the process then
orders the jobs on those machines by using single
machine scheduling heuristic with earliest due
date criterion.
51Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- If during this ordering phase a job is delayed to
depart a downstream machine (will cause a delay
in fulfilling the order on time), yet another
heuristic is used to reschedule that job on the
bottleneck and the upstream operations, with the
hope of delivering it to the customer on time. - If a successful solution can not be found this
way, then either the job is scheduled for
overtime, or alternate routing is sought for for
resolving the conflict.
52Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- The processes prior to the bottleneck (upstream)
are scheduled moving one machine at a time
upstream from the bottleneck. The idea here is to
schedule the jobs to arrive at the bottleneck
just in time - First the departure time from the machine just
prior to the bottleneck is calculated. Note that
we do know the scheduled depart time of the job
from the bottleneck. - Therefore,desired arrival to bottleneck
desired departure - processing time at the
bottleneck desired departure from the process
just prior to the bottleneck
53Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- This process is applied to all jobs.
- Similar to the bottleneck the desired arrival
times are calculated by using - desired arrival desired departure - processing
time desired departure from the process just
prior (upstream) to this operation - Once the arrival times are at hand, again, one
machine sequencing heuristic is used for
scheduling the jobs on this machine. - This process continues until all jobs are
scheduled on all machines.
54Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- This is also called infinite capacity planning in
MRP terminology and also used similarly in i2
Technologys famous Factory Planner (FP)
software. - Once the first machine is scheduled, this
provides us with the desired arrival time of the
raw material to support the just established
schedule. - According to this first machine start schedule,
we then look at on hand and on order inventories
to see if we can support the calculated schedule.
If, for some jobs there is no raw material, then
they should be ordered to arrive just in time.
This is the supply-chain-planning phase of the
DBR.
55Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- The hardest part of the DBR is to convert the
infinite capacity plan into finite capacity plan.
This is not a small task. - The problem, mathematically speaking, is a very
difficult problem to solve. Let alone to find the
optimal solution, it is sometimes impossible to
find a feasible solution which satisfies all
capacity constraints. - Several heuristic procedures have also been
suggested to find a good feasible solution. - However, those heuristics can not guarantee a
feasible solution even if there exists one.
56Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- To protect the bottleneck from random
fluctuations in process times, setup times and
other unforeseen variability, a buffer time is
established in front of the bottleneck machine.
This time buffer protects the bottleneck by
bringing the jobs to the bottleneck buffer by W
time units earlier than needed so that the
bottleneck will never starve for jobs. - Here, W is the time buffer for the bottleneck.
Its size depends on how much protection is
desired to keep the bottleneck from running out
of work.
57Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- Let Lj represent the sum of processing times of
all operations for job j before the bottleneck,
and W be the desired time buffer. - Since (j-1) jobs must go through the bottleneck
before job j can be scheduled, we can write the
desired relation as - Lj W ? ? (bi)
- Here, bi is the processing time of job I on the
bottleneck operation.
58Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) Technique
- The advantage of the DBR technique is its ability
to provide a means for supply chain planning. - Furthermore, by using a pull system upstream from
the bottleneck, the WIP is also controlled. - The cycle time is reduced significantly since the
material is ordered just in time. - The production system is utilized to its fullest
potential by insuring that jobs are always
available for the bottleneck. - Job-shop environment can also be scheduled by
using the DBR technique.
59Supply Chain Planning
- Lean manufacturing philosophy recognizes that to
acquire the best purchased items, it is often
necessary to work with suppliers to make them the
best. - This means joint problem solving, practicing
quality at the source, and exchanging
information. - This simply means establishing partnerships with
your suppliers.
60Supply Chain Planning
61SUPPLIER FOCUS
- Supplier focus is now recognized by WCM companies
for increasing competitiveness. - Suppliers are no longer important to success,
they are critical to success.
62SUPPLIER FOCUS
In essence, when customers and suppliers work
together to reduce the waste and inefficiencies
in design, manufacturing and logistics, the
resulting partnership provides significant
improvements that increase the competitive
strength of each member.
63Who is Your Supplier?
- Your vendor
- Another facility within the company
- Another department within the plant
- Another process in the plant
- The employee right next to you providing your
incoming material
64New Form of Supplier Relationship
- From suppliers point of view, manufacturers are
customers. Suppliers should guarantee quality,
delivery and cost (QDC) to the manufacturers.
65New Form of Supplier Relationship
- In the delivery area, frequent, small lot,
on-time deliveries should be targeted in order to
make manufacturer-supplier linkages tighter.
This can be achieved by establishing a pull
(Kanban) system between the two parties and
within each plant.
66New Form of Supplier Relationship
- In the quality area, the idea of quality at the
source should be practiced as much as possible.
- Lean manufacturing and one piece flow should be
practiced to the fullest extent. - Use of Poka Yoke and SPC should be encouraged to
the fullest extend. - Help train your suppliers to start and travel on
the Lean Manufacturing Journey.
67New Form of Supplier Relationship
- More and more manufacturers are requiring their
suppliers to guarantee six-sigma quality, which
becomes exceedingly difficult in the push or
batch manufacturing world. - This is another reason manufacturers are
demanding their suppliers to become lean by
turning into one piece flow cellular
manufacturing systems with 100 inspection.
68New Form of Supplier Relationship
- The most dependable, cooperative suppliers should
be identified and a close working relationship
should be developed functioning as an extended
factory from the manufacturers point of view. - Having dedicated suppliers for production of
certain parts is just like arranging machines for
a dedicated material flow within a plant.
69New Form of Supplier Relationship
- More and more suppliers are getting closer to the
manufacturers for improved communication,
logistics, and reduced cost.
70Vendor Selection and Certification
- The entire process of achieving certification as
a quality vendor is focused on building
excellence in ones manufacturing operations. - The basis for evaluating performance and ones
current market position can be categorized into
six elements
71Elements of Vendor Certification
- Management systems
- Design, specifications, and change control
- Incoming purchased materials
- In-process operations and practices
- Finished goods
- Measurement and test systems
72Elements of Vendor Certification Management
Systems
- Top managements commitment, leadership and
adherence to policy of Lean manufacturing and
continuous quality improvement - A quality manual (and plan?) for processes and
procedures - Employee education and training programs to
support LM and TQ. - An emphasis on quality systems for defect
prevention - A program for annual quality improvement (AQI)
for the elimination of waste - Statistical methods for problem identification
and problem solving
73Elements of Vendor Certification Management
Systems (contd)
- Documentation control of process requirements and
specifications - An organizational structure for fostering
participative quality management - A formal program for cost of quality
- The internal quality system audit
74Elements of Vendor Certification Design
Specifications and change control
- System for defining and communicating a
customers quality requirements into critical
final-product control specifications - Procedures to perform process capability for new
product development - Design review procedures
- Procedure for making customer and design review
changes - FMEA analysis performed for new product designs
- Print and engineering change control system
- System to distribute and communicate design
changes
75Elements of Vendor Certification Design
Specifications and change control (contd)
- System for process improvement and design
revisions - System for new-job startup process and
documentation control - System for product identification and lot
traceability to the design level.
76Elements of Vendor Certification Incoming
Purchased Material
- Assessment of suppliers capability
- Qualification of supplier
- Certification of suppliers
- Receiving inspection instructions and
documentation, with feedback for any problems - Formal program for initiating, documenting, and
implementing corrective actions with preventative
measures - Identification, isolation and disposition of
nonconforming material
77Elements of Vendor Certification Incoming
Purchased Material (contd)
- Reinspection and traceability of reworked parts
- Material planning, scheduling and job release
control system - Material storage control system for purchased
components and supplies.
78Elements of Vendor Certification In-Process
Operations, Control, Practices
- Process sheets and standard work instructions of
each operation of each part, incorporating visual
information where possible - Knowledgeable and involved operators in Lean
manufacturing, Kaizen and TQM. - Setup instruction sheets for all equipment
- Instruction sheets for first- and last- piece
inspection and in process inspection. - Work flow and material identification and control
79Elements of Vendor Certification In-Process
Operations, Control, Practices (contd)
- Inspection, scrap audit reports, and feedback
control - Customer return and rework procedures
- SPC and corrective actions
- Procedures for performing, documenting and
distributing process-capability analysis - Total preventative management (TPM) program in
place.
80Elements of Vendor Certification Finished goods
- Material storage control system (FIFO?)
- Packaging and handling instructions
- Material distribution control (test, verify,
record) - Proper storage facility for quality preservation
- Final inspection and control at shipping
- Audit history and tracking of product quality
81Elements of Vendor Certification Measurement and
Test Systems
- Gauge control program (incoming, in-process,
final) - Calibration schedule and records for all
measurement and test equipment - Traceability and conformance to national and
international standards - Deterioration tracking and maintenance program
(fixtures, tooling, molds, patterns, etc.)
82Elements of Vendor Certification
- The list of elements above, in essence, provides
a means to objectively evaluate the effectiveness
of the quality systems/procedures and
performance/adherence present in a manufacturing
organization - This evaluation, in turn, provides a basis for
decision making, corrective actions, and ongoing
quality improvement.
83Supplier Lead Times
- Vendors are continuously pressured by their
customers for more frequent deliveries and
shorter lead times - Particularly those manufacturers which have
advanced significantly along the lean
manufacturing journey and converted into Kanban
manufacturing control system are expecting more
frequent deliveries just in time. - Often several times a day and smaller quantities.
- If the vendor is not already into the lean
manufacturing journey, they can satisfy these
demands only at the expense of excess inventories.
84Supplier Lead Times
- Excess inventories and build to stock environment
always increases manufacturing cost and
compromises quality - Larger lot production causes longer cycle times
and thus longer lead times for promise to
customers. - Longer lead times, higher inventories, lower
quality and increased manufacturing costs often
leads to lost customer orders and abandonment by
the customers - In order to remain competitive we must become
lean. Lean manufacturing is the key to staying
competitive and winning more contracts, more
profits, and growth.
85Goal in Supplier Relations
- Become a lean manufacturer and help transform
your customers and vendors along your supply
chain to become lean as well. - This will require providing necessary technical
know-how to your supply chain partners through
company sponsored workshops, pilot projects and
visits to help speed up their journey into lean
manufacturing.