Capacity and Constraint Management: Dr. Ousha Alshamsi Chapter 7S
Capacity and Constraint Management: Dr. Ousha Alshamsi Chapter 7S
Capacity and Constraint Management: Dr. Ousha Alshamsi Chapter 7S
■ Break-Even Analysis.
The photo shows Machines at Frito-Lay are designed to produce 1,000 bags of chips/hr., and the plant operates 16 hrs./day.
system is available
Design Capacity = 1,000 bags / hr. ´ 16hrs.
= 16,000 bags / day
Effective capacity Design capacity minus lost Frito-Lay loses 3 hours of output per day (= 0.5
output because of planned hrs./day on preventive maintenance, 1 hr./day
resource unavailability (e.g., on employee breaks, and 1.5 hrs./day setting
The photo shows people who are employees working on preventive maintenance and setting up of machines for different products.
preventive maintenance, up machines for different products).
machine
Effective Capacity = 16,000bags / day
Effective Capacity equal to 16,000 bags per day minus left parenthesis 1,000 bags per hour right parenthesis. Left parenthesis 3 hours per day right parenthesis equal to 16,000 bags per day minus 3,000 bags per day equal to 13,000 bags per day.
setups/changeovers,
changes in product mix, - (1,000 bags / hr. ) ( 3 hrs. / day )
scheduled breaks) = 16,000 bags / day - 3,000 bags / day
= 13,000 bags / day
(e.g.,
absenteeism, ( 0.25 hr. / day ) = 13,000 bags / day - 250 bags / day
machine = 12,750 bags / day
breakdowns,
unavailable parts,
quality problems)
and strategy.
Diseconomies of scale
happen when
production costs
increase per product as
the business expands.
Economies of scale
occur in a business
when costs per unit of a
product decreases as
the business expands.
Figure S7.2
– Stimulate market
– Product changes
2. Adjusting equipment
6. Closing facilities.
■ Demand management
■ Capacity management
– Full time, temporary, part-time staff.
Figure S7.4
Prepared by Dr. Ousha Alshamsi, Ph.D., MEM, B. Eng, PMP
Capacity Analysis (1 of 5)
■ Two identical sandwich lines
■ Lines have two workers and three operations
■ All completed sandwiches are wrapped.
2. Lost time at the bottleneck represents lost capacity for the whole
system.
■ Fixed costs are costs that continue even if no units are produced
■ Variable costs are costs that vary with the volume of units produced
– Labor, materials, portion of utilities
Figure S7.5
Prepared by Dr. Ousha Alshamsi, Ph.D., MEM, B. Eng, PMP
Break-Even Analysis
Assumptions
F
BEPx =
P-V BEP$= BEPx X P
■ BEPx = 150,000 / (100-50)
■ BEP$ = 3000 X 100
= 3000 units
= 300,000 $
■ Break-Even Analysis.