Essential of Manufacturing Systems
Essential of Manufacturing Systems
Type of Production
Function in Manufacturing
Organization and Information Processing in Manufacturing
Production Concepts and Mathematical Models
WHAT IS MANUFACTURING
the transformation of
materials into items of
greater value by means
of one or more
processing and/or
assembly operations.
MANUFACTURING DEFINED AS A
ECONOMICAL
adds value to the material by:
changing its shape or properties
combining it with other materials that have been similarly altered.
Example
iron are is converted into steel
sand is transformed into glass
petroleumis refined into plastic
plastic is molded into the complex geometry of a patio chair
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES AND PRODUCTS
Manufactured Products
consumer capital
goods goods
Final products made by the manufacturing industries can be divided into
two major classes: consumer goods and capital goods.
MANUFACTURED PRODUCTS
Consumer goods
Are products purchased directly by consumers, such as cars, personal
computers, TVs, tires, and tennis rackets.
MANUFACTURED PRODUCTS
Capital goods
Are those purchased by companies to produce goods and/or provide
services.
Examples :aircraft, computers, communication equipment, medical
apparatus, trucks and buses, railroad locomotives, machine tools, and
construction equipment.
PRODUCTION QUANTITY AND PRODUCT
VARIETY
There is an inverse correlation between product variety and production quantity in terms of
factory operations.
OTHER FACTORY OPERATIONS
• Job Production
• Batch production
Ship building
dam construction
bridge building
book printing
CHARACTERISTICS OF
JOB PRODUCTION
• 1. A large number of general purpose machines are required.
• 2. A large number of workers conversant with different jobs will have to be
employed.
• 3. There can be some variations in production.
• 4. Some flexibility in financing is required because of variations in work load.
• 5. A large inventory of materials, parts and tools will be required.
• 6. The machines and equipment setting will have to be adjusted and re-
adjusted to the manufacturing requirements.
• 7. The movement of materials through the process is intermittent.
LIMITATIONS OF
JOB PRODUCTION
1. The economies of large scale production may not be attained because
production is done in short-runs.
3. One operation is carried out on whole batch and then is passed on to the
next operation and so on.
2. The products, materials and equipments must be standardised because the flow of
line is inflexible.
5. It should be possible to find time taken at each operation so that flow of work is
standardised.
• Production rate Rp
• Production capacity PC
• Utilization U
• Availability A
• Manufacturing lead time MLT
• Work-in-progress WIP
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Production rate Rp
• Hourly production rate
• Work units completed/Hr
• Cycle time: Time that one work unit spends being
processed or assembled. It is the time between
when one work unit begins processing and next
unit begins.
• Not all time is productive.
• Cycle time consists of i) actual machining
operation time ii) workpart handling time
iii) tool handling time per workpiece
Operation Cycle Time
where
MLTj = manufacturing lead time for part or product j (min).
Tsuji = setup time for operation i (min) for the product j,
Qj = quantity of part or product in the batch (pc),
Tcji = operation cycle time for operation i (min/pc),
Tnoji = nonoperation time associated with operation i (min),
and
i indicates the operation sequence in the processing; i = I,
2,... noj
To simplify and generalize the model,
let us assume that all setup times, operation cycle times, and non
operation times are equal for the noj machines.
Further, let us suppose that the batch quantities of all parts or
products processed through the plant are equal and that they are
all processed through the same number of machines, so that noj =
no , With these simplifications, Eq. becomes:
where
MLT = manufacturing lead time,
no = number of operations,
Tsu = setup time,
Q = batch quantity,
Tc = cycle time per part, and
Tno = non-operation time
• For a job shop in which the batch size is one (Q = 1), Eq.
(1.12) becomes
MLT=no(Tsu+TC+Tno)------------ (1.13)
For mass production, the Q term in Eq. (1.12) is very large
and dominates the other terms.
In the case of quantity type mass production in which a
large number of units are made on a single machine (no
=1). The MLT simply becomes the operation cycle time for
the machine after the setup has been completed and
production begins.
MLT = QxTc ------------1.14
4
For flow line mass production, the entire production line is
set up in advance. Also, the non operation time
between processing steps is simply the transfer time Tr
to move the part or product from one workstation to
the next. The station with the longest operation time
sets the pace for all stations:
MLT =no(Tr +Max To) = noTc --------------1.15
Since , (Tr +Max To) = Tc (1.5)
Since the number of stations is equal to the number of
operations (n = no) Eq. (1.15) can also be stated as
MLT =n(Tr +Max To) = nTc --------------1.16
A certain part is produced in a batch size of 100 units. The batch must be routed
through five operations to complete the processing of the parts. Average
setup time is 3 hr/operation, and average operation time is 6 min . Average
non operation time due to handling, delays, inspections, etc., is 7 hours for
each operation. Determine how many days it will take to complete the batch,
assuming the plant runs one 8-hr shift/day.
Solution:
Given:
Q = 100 units
no = 5
Tsu = 3hr/operation
Tc = 6 min
Tno = 7 hr/operation
The manufacturing lead time is computed from Fq
MLT = no (Tsu + QTc + Tno)
MLT = 5(3 + 100 X 0.1 + 7) = 100 hours
At 8 hr/day. this amounts to L00/8 = 12.5 days
A certain part is routed through six machines in a batch production plant. The
setup and operation times for each machine are given in the table below. The
batch size is 100 and the average non operation time per machine is 12 hours.
Determine (a) manufacturing lead time and (b) production rate for operation 3
Solution:
Given:
Q = 100 units
no = 5
Tsu = 3hr/operation
Tno = 12hr/machine
A certain part is routed through six machines in a production plant. The
operation times for each machine are given in the table below. Suppose the
part is made in very large quantities on a production line in which an
automated work handling system is used to transfer parts between machines.
Transfer time between stations = 15 s. The total time required to set up the
entire line is 150 hours. Assume that the operation times at the individual
machines remain the same. Determine (a) manufacturing lead time for a part
coming off the line.(b) production rate for operation 3. and (c) theoretical
production rate for the entire production line.
Solution:
Given:
a) MLT = no(Tr+MaxTo)
b) Rp3 = 60/Tp ; But Tp = Tc = To
c) Rp = 60/Tp; But Tp = Tc ; But Tc =
Tr+Max To
Work-In-Process