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Chapter 7 Basic Factory Dynamics

The document describes the Penny Fab, a hypothetical factory line with 4 identical tools that each take 2 hours to process a penny. It shows that in the best case scenario with no variability, the throughput increases and cycle time remains constant as WIP increases up to the critical WIP of 4 pennies, at which point the maximum throughput of 0.5 pennies/hour is achieved. Further increasing WIP above 4 pennies does not increase throughput but does increase cycle time linearly.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
528 views96 pages

Chapter 7 Basic Factory Dynamics

The document describes the Penny Fab, a hypothetical factory line with 4 identical tools that each take 2 hours to process a penny. It shows that in the best case scenario with no variability, the throughput increases and cycle time remains constant as WIP increases up to the critical WIP of 4 pennies, at which point the maximum throughput of 0.5 pennies/hour is achieved. Further increasing WIP above 4 pennies does not increase throughput but does increase cycle time linearly.

Uploaded by

Zara Sahar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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
You are on page 1/ 96

Basic Factory Dynamics

1
HAL Case

Large Panel Line: produces unpopulated printed circuit boards

Line runs 24 hr/day (but 19.5 hrs of productive time)


Recent Performance:
• throughput = 1,400 panels per day (71.8 panels/hr)
• WIP = 47,600 panels
• CT = 34 days (663 hr at 19.5 hr/day)
• customer service = 75% on-time delivery

Is HAL lean?
What data do we need to decide?
2
HAL - Large Panel Line Processes
Lamination (Cores): press copper and prepreg into core blanks
Machining: trim cores to size
Internal Circuitize: etch circuitry into copper of cores
Optical Test and Repair (Internal): scan panels optically for defects
Lamination (Composites): press cores into multiple layer boards
External Circuitize: etch circuitry into copper on outside of composites
Optical Test and Repair (External): scan composites optically for defects
Drilling: holes to provide connections between layers
Copper Plate: deposits copper in holes to establish connections
Procoat: apply plastic coating to protect boards
Sizing: cut panels into boards
End of Line Test: final electrical test

3
HAL Case - Science?

External Benchmarking
• but other plants may not be comparable

Internal Benchmarking
• capacity data: what is utilization?
• but this ignores WIP effects

Need relationships between WIP, TH, CT, service!

4
Definitions

Workstations: a collection of one or more identical machines.


Parts: a component, sub-assembly, or an assembly that moves through the
workstations.
End Items: parts sold directly to customers; relationship to constituent
parts defined in bill of material.
Consumables: bits, chemicals, gasses, etc., used in process but do not
become part of the product that is sold.
Routing: sequence of workstations needed to make a part.
Order: request from customer.
Job: transfer quantity on the line.

5
Definitions (cont.)

Throughput (TH): for a line, throughput is the average quantity of good


(non-defective) parts produced per unit time.
Work in Process (WIP): inventory between the start and endpoints of a
product routing.
Raw Material Inventory (RMI): material stocked at beginning of
routing.
Crib and Finished Goods Inventory (FGI): crib inventory is material
held in a stockpoint at the end of a routing; FGI is material held in
inventory prior to shipping to the customer.
Cycle Time (CT): time between release of the job at the beginning of the
routing until it reaches an inventory point at the end of the routing.

6
Factory Physics

Definition: A manufacturing system is a goal-oriented network


of processes through which parts flow.

Structure: Plant is made up of routings (lines), which in turn are


made up of processes.

Focus: Factory Physics is concerned with the network and flows


at the routing (line) level.

7
Parameters

Descriptors of a Line:
1) Bottleneck Rate (rb): Rate (parts/unit time or jobs/unit time)
of the process center having the highest long-term utilization.

2) Raw Process Time (T0): Sum of the long-term average


process times of each station in the line.

3) Congestion Coefficient (): A unitless measure of


congestion.
• Zero variability case,  = 0. Note: we won’t use  quantitatively,
• “Practical worst case,”  = 1. but point it out to recognize that lines
• “Worst possible case,”  = W0. with same rb and T0 can behave very
differently.
8
Parameters (cont.)

Relationship:

Critical WIP (W0): WIP level in which a line having no


congestion would achieve maximum throughput (i.e., rb)
with minimum cycle time (i.e., T0).

W0 = rb T0

9
The Penny Fab

Characteristics:
• Four identical tools in series.
• Each takes 2 hours per piece (penny).
• No variability(Best Case).
• CONWIP job releases.

Parameters:
rb = 0.5 pennies/hour (2 hrs. per penny)
T0 = 8 hours
W0 = 0.5  8 = 4 pennies

 = 0 (no variability, best case conditions)

10
The Penny Fab

11
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 0 hours

12
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 2 hours

13
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 4 hours

14
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 6 hours

15
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 8 hours

16
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 10 hours

17
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 12 hours

18
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 14 hours

19
The Penny Fab (WIP=1)

Time = 16 hours

Cycle Time = 8 hours

20
Penny Fab Performance

WIP TH CT THCT
1 0.125 8 1
2
3
4
5
6
21
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 0 hours

22
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 2 hours

23
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 4 hours

24
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 6 hours

25
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 8 hours

26
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 10 hours
System Warmed Up ….. Start Keeping Track

27
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 12 hours

28
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 14 hours

29
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 16 hours
1 Item Complete

30
The Penny Fab (WIP=2)

Time = 18 hours
2 Items Complete, so Throughput = 2/(18-10) = .25
Cycle Time = 8 hours

31
Penny Fab Performance

WIP TH CT THCT
1 0.125 8 1
2 0.250 8 2
3
4
5
6
32
The Penny Fab (WIP=4)

Time = 0 hours

33
The Penny Fab (WIP=4)

Time = 2 hours

34
The Penny Fab (WIP=4)

Time = 4 hours

35
The Penny Fab (WIP=4)

Time = 6 hours

36
The Penny Fab (WIP=4)

Time = 8 hours
System Warmed Up, Start Keeping Track

37
The Penny Fab (WIP=4)

Time = 10 hours
1 Unit Complete

38
The Penny Fab (WIP=4)

Time = 12 hours
2 Units Complete

39
The Penny Fab (WIP=4)

Time = 14 hours
3 Units Complete, so Throughput = 3/(14-8) = .5

Cycle Time = 8 hours

40
Penny Fab Performance

WIP TH CT THCT
1 0.125 8 1
2 0.250 8 2
3 0.375 8 3
4 0.500 8 4
5
6
41
The Penny Fab (WIP=5)

Time = 0 hours

42
The Penny Fab (WIP=5)

Time = 2 hours

43
The Penny Fab (WIP=5)

Time = 4 hours

44
The Penny Fab (WIP=5)

Time = 6 hours

45
The Penny Fab (WIP=5)

Time = 8 hours
System Warmed Up, Start Keeping Track

46
The Penny Fab (WIP=5)

Time = 10 hours
1 Unit Complete

47
The Penny Fab (WIP=5)

Time = 12 hours
2 Units Complete, so Throughput = 2/(12-8) = .5
Cycle Time = 10 Hours

48
Penny Fab Performance

WIP TH CT THCT
1 0.125 8 1
2 0.250 8 2
3 0.375 8 3
4 0.500 8 4
5 0.500 10 5
6 0.500 12 6

49
TH vs. WIP: Best Case

0.6

rb 0.5
0.4
TH

0.3
1/T0
0.2
0.1

0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
W0 WIP
50
CT vs. WIP: Best Case

26
24
22
20
18
16 1/rb
14
CT

12
10
T0 8
6
4
2
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

W0 WIP

51
Best Case Performance (No Variability)

Best Case Law: 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
TH best 
 rb , otherwise.

52
Best Case Performance (cont.)

Example: For Penny Fab, rb = 0.5 and T0 = 8, so W0 = 0.5  8 = 4,

 8, if w  4
CTbest 
w / .5, otherwise.

 w / 8, if w  4
TH best 
0.5, otherwise.

which are exactly the curves we plotted.

53
A Manufacturing Law

Little's Law: The fundamental relation between WIP, CT, and


TH over the long-term is:
WIP  TH  CT

parts
parts   hr
hr

Insights:
• Fundamental relationship
• Simple units transformation
• Definition of cycle time (CT = WIP/TH)

54
Penny Fab Two

2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

55
Penny Fab Two

Station Number of Process Station


Number Machines Time Rate
1 1 2 hr 0.5 j/hr
2 2 5 hr 0.4 j/hr
3 6 10 hr 0.6 j/hr
4 2 3 hr 0.67 j/hr

0.4 p/hr
rb = ____________ 20 hr
T0 = ____________ 8 pennies
W0 = ____________

56
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=0)

2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

57
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=2)

7
4

2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

58
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=4)

7
6
9
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

59
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=6)

7
8
9
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

60
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=7)
17

12
8
9
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

61
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=8)
17

12
10
9
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

62
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=9)
17

19

12
10
14
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

63
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=10)
17

19

12
12
14
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

64
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=12)
17

19

17 22
14
14
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

65
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=14)
17

19

17 22
16
19 24
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

66
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=16)
17

19

17 22

19 24
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

67
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=17)
27

19

22 22 20

19 24
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

68
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=19)
27

29

22 22 20

24 24 22
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

69
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=20)
27
Note: job will arrive at
bottleneck just in time
to prevent starvation. 29

22 22
22
24 24 22
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

10 hr

70
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=22)
27

29

27 32 25
24
24 24
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr

Note: job will arrive at


bottleneck just in time
to prevent starvation. 10 hr

71
Penny Fab Two Simulation (Time=24)
27

29

27 32 25

29 34 27
2 hr
5 hr 3 hr
And so on….
Bottleneck will just
stay busy; all others
10 hr will starve periodically

72
Worst Case

Observation: The Best Case yields the minimum cycle time and
maximum throughput for each WIP level.

Question: What conditions would cause the maximum cycle time and
minimum throughput?

Experiment:
• set average process times same as Best Case (so rb and T0 unchanged,
so we are examining the same line)
• follow a marked job through system
• imagine marked job experiences maximum queueing (this would
occur if the first job took all the time and the other jobs took no time)

73
Worst Case Penny Fab

Time = 0 hours
Job 1 takes 8 hours, jobs 2,3,4 take 0 hours

rb = 4/(8 + 0 + 0 + 0) = .5, To= 32/4 = 8

74
Worst Case Penny Fab

Time = 8 hours

75
Worst Case Penny Fab

Time = 16 hours

76
Worst Case Penny Fab

Time = 24 hours

77
Worst Case Penny Fab

Time = 32 hours Note:


CT = 32 hours
= 4 8 = wT0

TH = 4/32 = 1/8 = 1/T0


78
TH vs. WIP: Worst Case

0.6
Best Case
rb 0.5
0.4
TH

0.3
0.2
Worst Case
1/T0 0.1
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
W0 WIP

79
CT vs. WIP: Worst Case

32
Worst Case
28
24
20
CT

16 Best Case
12
T0 8
4
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
W0 WIP

80
Worst Case Performance

Worst Case Law: The worst case cycle time for a given WIP
level, w, is given by,

CTworst = w T0

The worst case throughput for a given WIP level, w, is given


by,

THworst = 1 / T0

Randomness? None - perfectly predictable, but bad!

81
Practical Worst Case

Observation: There is a BIG GAP between the Best Case and


Worst Case performance. Both cases are highly unlikely in practice.

Question: Can we find an intermediate case that:


• divides “good” and “bad” lines, and
• is computable?

Experiment: consider a line with a given rb and T0 and:


• single machine stations
• balanced lines
• variability such that all WIP configurations (states) are equally
likely(worst case) … if actual system performs worse than this
improvements are certainly possible

82
PWC Example – 3 jobs, 4 stations
clumped
up states
State Vector State Vector
1 (3,0,0,0) 11 (1,0,2,0)
2 (0,3,0,0) 12 (0,1,2,0)
3 (0,0,3,0) 13 (0,0,2,1)
4 (0,0,0,3) 14 (1,0,0,2)
5 (2,1,0,0) 15 (0,1,0,2)
6 (2,0,1,0) 16 (0,0,1,2)
7 (2,0,0,1) 17 (1,1,1,0)
8 (1,2,0,0) 18 (1,1,0,1)
9 (0,2,1,0) 19 (1,0,1,1)
10 (0,2,0,1) 20 (0,1,1,1) spread
out states
Note: average WIP at any station is 15/20 = 0.75,
so jobs are spread evenly between stations.
83
Practical Worst Case
Let w = jobs in system, N = no. stations in line, and t = process time at all
stations:
CT(single): suppose you are a job, upon arrival to a machine the time it takes to
get through will be the time necessary to process the other (w-1) jobs plus the
time to process your job.
So,
CT(single) = t + ((w-1)/N)t
= (1 + (w-1)/N) t
CT(line) = N [1 + (w-1)/N] t
= Nt + (w-1)t
= T0 + (w-1)/rb, since t = 1/rb
TH = WIP/CT
= [w/(w+W0-1)]rb, since Wo = rb x To

From Little’s Law


84
Practical Worst Case Performance

Practical Worst Case Definition: The practical worst case


(PWC) cycle time for a given WIP level, w, is given by,
w 1
CTPWC  T0 
rb

The PWC throughput for a given WIP level, w, is given by,

w
TH PWC  rb ,
W0  w  1

where W0 is the critical WIP.

85
TH vs. WIP: Practical Worst Case

0.6
Best Case
rb 0.5
0.4 Good (lean)
PWC
TH

0.3
0.2 Bad (fat) Worst Case
1/T0 0.1
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
W0 WIP

86
CT vs. WIP: Practical Worst Case

32 Worst Case PWC


28
24
20 Bad (fat)
CT

16 Best Case
Good
12 (lean)
T0 8
4
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
W0 WIP

87
Penny Fab Two Performance
0.5
Note: process
Best Case
rb 0.4 times in PF2
have var equal
F ab 2 to PWC.
Penny
0.3
But… unlike
TH a l W orst Cas
e
Practic PWC, it has
0.2
unbalanced
line and multi
0.1 machine
stations.
1/T0
Worst Case
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26
W0 WIP
88
Penny Fab Two Performance (cont.)
80

70
Worst Case
60
Case
rs t
50 al Wo
2
r act ic Fab
P ny
CT 40 Pen 1/rb

30

T0 20
Best Case
10

0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26
W0
WIP
89
Back to the HAL Case - Capacity Data

Process Rate (p/hr) Time (hr)


Lamination 191.5 4.7
Machining 186.2 0.5
Internal Circuitize 114.0 3.6
Optical Test/Repair - Int 150.5 1.0
Lamination – Composites 158.7 2.0
External Circuitize 159.9 4.3
Optical Test/Repair - Ext 150.5 1.0
Drilling 185.9 10.2
Copper Plate 136.4 1.0
Procoat 117.3 4.1
Sizing 126.5 1.1
EOL Test 169.5 0.5
rb, T0 114.0 33.9

90
HAL Case - Situation

Critical WIP: rbT0 = 114  33.9 = 3,869

Actual Values:
• CT = 34 days = 663 hours (at 19.5 hr/day)
• WIP = 47,600 panels
• TH = 71.8 panels/hour

Conclusions:
• Throughput is 63% of capacity (bottleneck rate)
• WIP is 12.3 times critical WIP
• CT is 24.1 times raw process time

91
HAL Case - Analysis

TH Resulting from PWC with WIP = 47,600?


w 47,600 Much higher
TH  rb  114  105.4
w  W0  1 47,600  3,869  1 than actual TH!

WIP Required for PWC to Achieve TH = 0.63rb?

w
TH  rb  0.63rb
w  W0  1
0.63 0.36 Much lower than
w (W0  1)  (3,869  1)  6,586 actual WIP!
0.37 0.37

Conclusion: actual system is much worse than PWC!

92
HAL Internal Benchmarking Outcome

120.0 Current
Throughput (panels/hour)

TH = 71.8
“Lean" Region WIP = 47,600
100.0

80.0
Best
60.0 Worst
“Fat" Region
PWC
40.0

20.0

0.0
0 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 50,000
WIP
93
Labor Constrained Systems

Motivation: performance of some systems are limited by labor or


a combination of labor and equipment.

Full Flexibility with Workers Tied to Jobs:


• WIP limited by number of workers (n)
• capacity of line is n/T0
• Best case achieves capacity and has workers in “zones”
• ample capacity case also achieves full capacity with “pick and
run” policy

94
Labor Constrained Systems (cont.)

Full Flexibility with Workers Not Tied to Jobs:


• TH depends on WIP levels
• THCW(n)  TH(w)  THCW(w)
• need policy to direct workers to jobs (focus on downstream is
effective)

Agile Workforce Systems


• bucket brigades
• kanban with shared tasks
• worksharing with overlapping zones
• many others

95
Factory Dynamics Takeaways

Performance Measures:
• throughput
• WIP
• cycle time
• service
Range of Cases:
• best case
• practical worst case
• worst case
Diagnostics:
• simple assessment based on rb, T0, actual WIP,actual TH
• evaluate relative to practical worst case

96

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