CHAPTER - 3 (A) : ASSEMBLY Systems & LINE Balancing
CHAPTER - 3 (A) : ASSEMBLY Systems & LINE Balancing
CHAPTER - 3 (A) : ASSEMBLY Systems & LINE Balancing
ASSEMBLY systems
&
LINE balancing
Manual Assembly Lines
Each product consists of multiple components joined
together by various assembly processes
These kinds of products are usually made on a manual
assembly line
Factors favoring the use of assembly lines:
High or medium demand for product
Identical or similar products
Total work content can be divided into work elements
It is technologically impossible or economically
infeasible to automate the assembly operations
Most consumer products are assembled on manual
assembly lines
Why Assembly Lines are so Productive
Specialization of labor
Learning curve
Interchangeable parts
Components made to close tolerances
Work flow principle
Products are brought to the workers
Line pacing
Workers must complete their tasks within the cycle
time of the line which paces the line to maintain a
specified production rate
Manual Assembly Line Defined
Asynchronous transport
Work units are moved independently between
workstations
At any moment some units are moving between
work stations while others are positioned at
stations
Queues of work units can form in front of each
station
Continuous Transport
Given:
Total work content consists of many distinct work
elements
The sequence in which the elements can be performed
is restricted
The line must operate at a specified cycle time
Problem:
To assign the individual work elements to workstations
so that all workers have an equal amount of work to
perform
Line Balancing Problem
Precedence Constraints:
In addition to the variation in element times that make it
difficult to obtain equal service times for all stations, there
are restrictions on the order in which the work elements
can be performed.
Some elements must be done before others.
Components of Cycle Time Tc
Line efficiency
Management is responsible to maintain line operation
at efficiencies (proportion uptime) close to 100%
Implement preventive maintenance
Well-trained emergency repair crews to quickly fix
breakdowns when they occur
Avoid shortages of incoming parts to avoid forced
downtime
Insist on highest quality components from
suppliers to avoid downtime due to poor quality
parts
Other Considerations - continued
Methods analysis
To analyze methods at bottleneck or other
troublesome workstations
Subdividing work elements
It may be technically possible to subdivide some work
elements to achieve a better line balance
Sharing work elements between two adjacent stations
Alternative cycles between two workers
Other Considerations - continued
Utility workers
To relieve congestion at stations that are temporarily
overloaded
Changing workhead speeds at mechanized stations
Increase power feed or speed to achieve a better line
balance
Preassembly of components
Prepare certain subassemblies off-line to reduce work
content time on the final assembly line
Other Considerations - continued
Position constraints
Encountered in assembly of large products such as
trucks and cars, making it difficult for one worker to
perform tasks on both sides of the product
To address, assembly workers are positioned on both
sides of the line
Alternative Assembly Systems