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Waiting Lines Students should be able to:

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1 Waiting Lines Students should be able to:
Categorize a waiting line problem as to customer population, waiting line arrangement, and service facility arrangement. Describe the operating characteristics of waiting line systems and the important decisions. Apply the single-server and multiple-server models. Use Little’s Law to estimate the number of customers in the service system.

2 Waiting Line Models Customer population Service system Waiting line
Served customers Waiting line Priority rule Service facilities Figure C.1

3 Waiting Line Arrangements
Service facilities (a) Single line Waiting Line Arrangements Service facilities (b) Multiple lines Figure C.2

4 Operating Characteristics
Line length Number of customers in system Waiting time in line Total time in system Service facility utilization

5 Decision Areas Arrival rates Number of service facilities
Number of phases Number of servers per facility Server efficiency Priority rule Service facility arrangement

6 Waiting Line Assumptions
Customer population : Infinite and patient Customer arrivals : Poisson distribution Mean arrival rate = l 3. Service times : Exponential distribution Mean service rate = m Priority rule : First-come-first-served (FCFS) Waiting line : Unlimited length

7 Service Facility Arrangements
Single channel, Single phase

8 Single-Server Model Single-Channel, Single-Phase System
Arrival rate = 30/hour Service rate = 35/hour l m 30 35 Utilization =  = = = 0.857, or 85.7% m - l 30 35 – 30 l Average number in system = L = = = 6 customers Average number in line = Lq =  L = 0.857(6) = 5.14 customers 1 m - l 1 35 – 30 Average time in system = W = = = 0.20 hour Average time in line = Wq =  W = 0.857(0.20) = 0.17 hour Example C.3

9 Little’s Law

10 Service Facility Arrangements
Multiple channel, Single phase

11 Multiple-Server Model Multiple-Channel, Single-Phase System
Distribution Center s = 4 unloading bays λ = 3 trucks arrive per hour μ = 1 truck unloaded per hour per bay Suppose that it was observed that the average number of trucks waiting to be unloaded is trucks. hours waiting hours being unloaded and waiting trucks in the system utilization

12 Designing a Distribution Center
Proposed design: 4 unloading bays Employees required: 2 per bay -- $30 per hour each Truck arrivals: 3 per hour Unloading rate: 1 truck per hour per team Idle truck cost: $100 per hour Number Number of Employee Number of Truck of Bays Employees Cost/Hr Trucks in System Cost/Hr Total $ $ $693 $ $ $ 5 Bays are the least expensive to operate.

13 Choosing a Service Facility Arrangement
Suppose you have two servers, each can service 5 customers per hour. In Design 1, which is two single-line, single-server facilities, each server has her own line and each receives and average of 4 customers per hour. In Design 2, which is a single-line, multiple-server facility, there are two servers and an average demand of 8 customers per hour. How do the designs affect customer service?

14 How Does Facility Arrangement Affect Customer Service?
Design Design 2 Utilization Number in System Number in Line Wait Time in System Wait Time in Line

15 NYPD Patrol System Data The average service time is 30 minutes.
Precinct statistics Precinct Average Calls Total Felonies Size per Hour per Year Sq. Miles ________ ___________ ___________ _______ A , B , If you had a total of 9 cars to allocate, how would you do it?

16 Precinct Waiting Statistics
Precinct A # Cars Utilization 4 5 6 7 8 .373 .080 .023 .007 .002 2.390 .513 .145 . 043 . 012 .800 .640 .533 .457 .400 Precinct B # Cars Utilization 2 3 4 5 6


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