Process Design and Facility Layout: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin
Process Design and Facility Layout: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin
Process Design and Facility Layout: Mcgraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 6
Process Design
and
Facility Layout
Product and
service design Layout
Process
Technological selection
change Work
design
Process Selection
• Variety
– How much
• Flexibility
– What degree
• Volume
– Expected output
Process Types
• Job Shops
• Batch Processing
• Repetitive/Assembly
• Continuous Processing
• Projects
Product Design
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)
One of a kind Low volume, Multiple Few major High volume
products, made low products products, high
Process to customer standardization moderate higher standardization,
order volume volume commodity
Characteristics products
Less Complexity, Less Divergence, More Line Flows
(1)
Complex and
highly customized Project
process, unique process
sequence of tasks
(2)
Jumbled flows, Job
complex work with process
many exceptions
(3)
Disconnected line Batch
flows, moderately process
complex work
(4)
Connected line,
Line
routine work process
(5)
Continuous Continuous
flows, highly
repetitive work process
Product-Process Matrix
Fe High
Low Multip w Volume,
Volum Products,
le Maj High
Low
e One Products,Highe
or Standar
of a Volum r d-
Kind e Volum ization Flexibilit
Job Commerc e y-
Sho ial
Quality
p Printer
Batc Heavy
h Equipme
nt
Assemb Automob
ly ile
Line Assembl
Continuo y Sugar
us Refine Dependabil
Flow ry ity
Flexibility- Dependability- Cost
Quality Cost
Operations Management, Seventh Edition, by William J. Stevenson
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
6-8 Process Design and Facility Layout
Automation
Automation
Layout
• Product Layouts
• Process Layouts
• Fixed-Position
• Combination Layouts
Process Layout
Milling
Assembly
Grinding
& Test
Drilling Plating
Process Layout - work travels
to dedicated process centers
Functional Layout
222 22 222
2
444 Drill Grin 333
111
Mil 44 d 3
l 4
1111
111 2222
Assemb
33 ly
11 3 11
1 He 11 Gear 1
333 Lathe
at 1 cuttin 44
s 4
tre g
at
• Cellular Layout
– e.g. Shipbuilding
Cellular Layouts
• Cellular Manufacturing
– Layout in which machines are grouped into
a cell that can process items that have
similar processing requirements
• Group Technology
– The grouping into part families of items with
similar design or manufacturing
characteristics
In 1 2 3 4
Workers
Out 10 9 8 7
Heat Gear
-1111 Lathe Mill Drill -1111
treat cut
Heat
Mill Drill Grin
Assembly
222222222 treat - 2222
d
Heat - 3333
3333333333 Lath e Mill Grin
treat
d
Cycle Time
OT
O utput capacity =
CT
OT
CT = cycle tim e =
D
(D)( t)
N=
OT
Precedence Diagram
Precedence diagram: Tool used in line balancing
to display elemental tasks and sequence
requirements
0.1 min. 1.0 min.
A Simple Precedence
a b Diagram
c d e
0.7 min. 0.5 min. 0.2 min.
Solution to Example 1
Solution to Example 2
a b e
f g h
c d
Parallel Workstations
Bottlene
ck
30/h 1 min. 30/h
r. r.
60/h 60/h
1 min. 1 1 min.
r. r.
min. 30/h
r. 1 30/h
min. r.
Parallel
Workstations
Operations Management, Seventh Edition, by William J. Stevenson
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.