Cp-4 Erp A Manufacturing Perspective
Cp-4 Erp A Manufacturing Perspective
Cp-4 Erp A Manufacturing Perspective
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15.MRP logic uses the MPS, the BOM file & the inventory records
to determine the following for the components:
Planned order quantities
Planned order release dates (to shop floor/suppliers)
Planned order due dates
1*.The MRP system calculates the release dates & due date
taking into consideration the lead times required to produce or
procure the components and by recognizing the order in which
they are assembled into the finished product.
17.If the MRP process is carried out in conjunction with the
capacity planning, the production facility should have to
complete the orders on time.
BILL OF MATERIAL (BOM)
A BOM defines the relationship of components to end
items. The BOM identifies all components used in the
production of an item, the ordered quantity & the order in
which components are assembled.
A BOM can define products as they are designed
(engineering bill of materials), as they are ordered (sales
bill of materials), as they are built (manufacturing bill of
materials), or as they are maintained (service bill odf
materials .
OFFICE CHAIR
i. Elimination of waste
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Total quality management eliminates the defects in a JIT
environment. The aim is to prevent defects from
occurring and this can be achieved by detecting the
problem at their source.
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It means that the management must provide the
leadership which result in the employees to be more
participative in the process, continuous education &
training is provided.
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7. Minimizes waste
8. Maintains control
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2. The way PDM systems cope with this challenge is that the
master data is secured once in a secure µvault¶, where its
integrity can be assured as all changes to it monitored,
controlled and recorded.
4. The new data is then released back into the vault. When a
µchange¶ is made to the data, signed and dated, is stored in
the vault alongside the old data which remains in its original
form as a permanent record.
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Process management is about controlling the way people
create and modify data-active procedures.
This may sound like a new name for µproject
management¶, but it is not.
Project management concerns itself only with the
delegation of tasks; process management addresses the
impact of tasks on data. Process management systems
normally have three broad functions:
a) They manage what happens to the data when someone works on
it (Work Management).
b) They manage the flow of data between people (Workflow
Management).
c) They keep track of all the events and movements that happen in
functions 1 and 2 during the history of a project (Work History
Management).
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