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Chapter 7 Vehicle Routing and Scheduling

This document discusses vehicle routing and scheduling in logistics. It covers topics such as transportation mode selection, carrier routing with multiple origins and destinations, and vehicle scheduling. Transportation decisions are important as they can significantly impact logistics costs. The key considerations for routing include minimizing time, distance and costs while improving customer service and vehicle utilization. Various routing problems are discussed, from single origin-destination points to more complex scenarios with multiple pick-up and drop-off locations.

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71% found this document useful (7 votes)
4K views

Chapter 7 Vehicle Routing and Scheduling

This document discusses vehicle routing and scheduling in logistics. It covers topics such as transportation mode selection, carrier routing with multiple origins and destinations, and vehicle scheduling. Transportation decisions are important as they can significantly impact logistics costs. The key considerations for routing include minimizing time, distance and costs while improving customer service and vehicle utilization. Various routing problems are discussed, from single origin-destination points to more complex scenarios with multiple pick-up and drop-off locations.

Uploaded by

changyq
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CHAPTER 7

VEHICLE ROUTING AND


SCHEDULING
 transportation: a key decision in
logistics mix
 transportation absorbs a higher
percentage of logistics costs than
any other logistics activity
 transportation decisions are
 mode selection
 carrier routing
 vehicle scheduling, and
 shipment consolidation
7.1
TRANSPORT
SERVICE SELECTION
Selection of Mode of
Transportation
 depends on a variety of service characteristics
 speed
 time of delivery
 inventory carried
 from surveys that rank transport service
characteristics, shows that, except for cost,
speed and dependability are the most
important factors
 cost of service, average transit time (speed),
and transit-time variability (dependability) are
the basis for transportation modal selection
7.1.1
Basic Cost Trade-Offs
Basic Cost Trade-Offs
 When transportation is not used to provide a
competitive advantage, the best choice is by
trading off the cost of using a particular transport
service with the indirect cost of inventory
associated with the selected transportation mode
 speed and dependability affect
 shippers and buyer’s inventory levels

 the amount of inventory in transit between the

shipper and buyer’s locations


 slower, less reliable services create more
inventories in the channel
 inventory carrying cost may be trade-off with
lower cost for the transportation service
 the favored service will be the one that offers the
lowest total cost consistent with customer service
goals while meeting customer service objectives
Example 1
The CarryAll Luggage Company
 produces a line of luggage goods
 finished goods inventories are kept at the plant site
 goods are then shipped to field warehouses by common
carriers
 rail is currently used
 average transit time for rail shipments is T = 21 days
 at each stocking point,
 average of 100,000 units
 average cost of C = $30 per unit
 inventory carrying cost is I = 30% per unit cost per
year
 To select the mode of transportation that will minimize
the total costs
 estimated that for every day that transit time can be
reduced from the current 21 days, average inventory
levels can be reduced by 1%
 Demand, D = 700,000 units sold per year
Transport Rates Door-to-door Transit No. of
service ($/unit) Times (days) shipments per
year
Rail 0.10 21 10
Piggyback 0.15 14 20
Truck 0.2 5 20
Air 1.40 2 40

Procurement costs and transit-time variability is assumed to


be negligible.
Table 7-2 Transportation Choice Evaluations
for the CarryAll Luggage Company

Cost Type Method of Rail Piggyback Truck Air


Computatio
n
Transportation RXD (0.10)(700,000) (0.15)(700,000) (0.20)(700,000) (1.40)(700,000)
= 70,000 = 105,000 = 140,000 = 980,000

In-transit ICDT (0.30)(30)(700,000)(21) (0.30)(30)(700,000)(14) (0.30)(30)(700,000)(5) (0.30)(30)(700,000)(2)


Inventory 365 365 365 365 365
= 362,466 = 241,644 = 86,301 = 34,521

Plant ICQ/2 (0.30)(30)(100,000)/2 (0.30)(30)(50,000)/2 (0.30)(30)(50,000)/2 (0.30)(30)(25,000)/2


inventory = 450,000 = 225,000 = 225,000 = 112,500

Field IC’Q/2 (0.30)(30.1)(100,000)/2 (0.30)(30.15)(50,000)/2 (0.30)(30.2)(50,000)/2 (0.30)(31.4)(25,000)/2


inventory = 451,500 = 226,125 = 226,500 = 117,750

Totals $1,333,966 $797,769 $677,801 $1,244,771


7.1.2
Competitive
Considerations
Selection of transportation
mode to create a competitive
service advantage
 when buyer purchases goods from >1 supplier, the
logistics service offered + the price, may influence
the supplier’s selection
 if suppliers select the transport mode, they can
control this element and thus influence the buyer’s
patronage
 to buyer, better transport service (lower transit time
and transit-time variability) means
 lower inventory levels and/or

 operating schedules can be met with greater

certainty
 The buyer’s action is to shift its purchasing decision
toward the supplier offering the preferred transport
service
 The profit may defray a premium transport service
and encourage supplier to seek the transport service
appealing to the buyer rather than simply the one
offering the lowest cost
 transport service selection becomes a joint decision
between supplier and buyer
 supplier competes for the buyer’s patronage through
the choice of a transport mode
 buyer responds to the choice by offering the supplier
more business
 more business will depend on the transport service
differential created among competing suppliers
 supplier will not settle on a single transport service in a
dynamic, competitive environment
Example 2
 A manufacturer purchases 3,000 cases of plastic
parts valued at $100 per case from two suppliers
 purchases are currently divided equally between
the suppliers
 supplier uses rail transport and achieves the same
average delivery time
 if for each day that a supplier can reduce the
average delivery time, the manufacturer will shift
5% of its total purchases, or 150 cases, to the
supplier
 supplier earns a margin of 20% per case before
transportation charges
 Supplier A would like to consider whether it would
be beneficial to switch from rail to air or truck
modes
Transport Mode Transport Rate Delivery Time

Rail $2.50/case 7 days

Truck 6.00 4

Air 10.35 2
Profit comparison for Supplier A’s
Transport Modal Choices

Transport Cases Gross Transport cost Net profit


Mode Sold Profit

Rail 1,500 $30,000.00 - $ 3,750.00 = $26,250.00

Truck 1,950 $39,000.00 - $11,700.00 = $27,300.00

Air 2,250 $45,000.00 - $23,287.50 = $21,712.50


7.1.3
Appraisal of Selection
Methods
Methods for transport
service selection
 need to account for the indirect
effect that transportation choice
has on inventory costs
 the patronage of the shippers
and consignees
 there are other factors which
are not under the control of the
logistics manager
1. Effective Cooperation
between Supplier and
Buyer
 a reasonable knowledge of each party’s cost is
available
 if they are separate legal entities, doubt that
perfect cost information is possible unless
some information exchange is worked out
 Sensitivity
 to the other party’s reactions to a transport service
choice
or
 to the degree of patronage
should indicate the direction of cooperation
2. Competing suppliers
in the distribution
channel
 buyer and the supplier should
act rationally to gain optimum
cost-transport service trade­
offs
 rationality among the parties
can not be guaranteed.
3. Price effects
 supplier might raise product
price to provide a higher-
quality transportation service
than the competitor
 buyer should consider both
price and transport
performance when
determining patronage
4. Transport rate
 changes because of changes in
product mix and inventory cost
 adds a dynamic element to the
problem that is not directly
considered
5. Indirect effects of
transport choice on supplier
inventories
 suppliers and buyers may
experience increased or decreased
inventory levels as a result of the
shipment size associated with the
transport choice
 suppliers may adjust price to
reflect this, which, in turn, will
affect transport choice
7.2
VEHICLE ROUTING
VEHICLE ROUTING
 transportation costs range between 1/3 to 2/3 of logistics
costs
 improve efficiency through maximum utilization of
transportation equipment and personnel is a major concern
 length of time that goods are in tran­sit reflects on the
number of shipments a vehicle can made within a given
period of time
 to reduce transportation costs and improve customer
service, finding the best path to minimize the time or
distance of travel, is an important consideration
 many variations of routing problems
 find a path through a network where the origin point is
different from the destination point
 find a path which involves multiple origin and destination
points
 find a path where origin and destination points are the
same
7.2.1 Separate and
Single Origin and
Destination Points
 problem of routing a vehicle
through a network can be
solved by many methods
 the simplest and most
straightforward method is the
shortest route method
 Example 3
7.2.2 Multiple Origin
and Destination Points
 multiple source points that may serve
multiple destination points
 commonly occurs when there is more than
one vendor, plant, or warehouse to serve
more than one customer for the same
product
 further complicated when the source points
are restricted in the amount of the total
customer demand that can be supplied from
each location
 solved by transportation method
 Example 4
7.2.3 Coincident Origin
and Destination
Points
 origin point is the same as the destination point
 commonly occurs when transport vehicles are
privately owned, e.g.
 routing of delivery trucks from a warehouse to

retail points and return to the warehouse


 local delivery trucks from retail stores to customers

 routing of school buses, newspaper delivery trucks,

garbage collection trucks, and cars making


deliveries of meals to offices
 the objective is to find the sequence in which the
points should be visited that will minimize to­tal travel
time or distance
 known as the “traveling salesman” problem
 cognitive and heuristic solution procedures are used
to solve these problems
(a)Points Are Spatially
Related
 solutions can be found by using the pattern
recognition capabilities of the human mind
 good stop sequences are formed when the
paths of the route do not cross
 the shape of the route will usually bulge, or
form a teardrop shape, where possible
 illustrated in Figure 7-6
 based on these two principles, an analyst
can quickly sketch out a route plan that
might require a computer many hours to
find
(a)Points Are Spatially
Related
 alternatively, a computer model can be used to
find the stop sequences on a route
 better choice when the spatial relationship
between stops does not represent their true
travel time or distance, e.g
 travel barriers

 one-way streets, or

 traffic congestion present

 locating stops geographically, e.g. coordinate


points, can reduce the amount of data
 the computer is assigned the task of estimating
the distances or times
 computational procedures have been developed
that rapidly solve the problem and produce
results that are close to optimum
 Example 5
(b)Points Are Not
Spatially Related
 where it is not easy to establish the spatial
relationship between stops on the tour, or
 where the spatial relationships become
distorted because of exact distances, or times,
should be specified between stop pairs
 cognitive procedures are less applicable
 must resort to a mathematical procedures to
treat this problem
 although the inter-stop distances, or times,
can be exact, solution procedures tend to
gives approximate answers
 example 6

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