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1  Types of production systems. 2 Factors Influencing Process Choices  Volume: Average quantity of the products produced in a manufacturing system –Low.

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Presentation on theme: "1  Types of production systems. 2 Factors Influencing Process Choices  Volume: Average quantity of the products produced in a manufacturing system –Low."— Presentation transcript:

1 1  Types of production systems

2 2 Factors Influencing Process Choices  Volume: Average quantity of the products produced in a manufacturing system –Low volume: Turnkey project management firms such as L&T and BHEL –High volume: Consumer non-durable and FMCG sector firms, Automobile, Chemical Processing –Mid-volume: Consumer durables, white goods and several industrial products  Variety: Number of alternative products and variants of each product that is offered by a manufacturing system –Variety of product offerings is likely to introduce variety at various processes in the system; alternative production resources, materials, and skill of workers (Titan,Telco)  Flow: Flow indicates the nature and intensity of activities involved in conversion of components and material from raw material stage to finished goods stage

3 3 Relationship between volume and variety VolumeVariety Mass Production Petrochemicals, Automobile Project Organisations Turnkey Project Execution Mid volume Mid variety Motor Manufacturing Pharmaceuticals High

4 4 Processes & Operations Systems Available Alternatives  Three types of flows occur in operating systems: –Continuous –Intermittent –Jumbled  Process characteristics are largely determined by the flow of products in the operating system

5 5 Types of industries 5 Basic Industries Manufacturing DiscreteProcess ServicesProject

6 6 Paper Manufacturing An example of process industry Logs and chips of wood stored Crushing of logs and chips Processing of the wood Cleaning & Bleaching Refining the Wood pulp Drying the wood pulp Stretching Paper rolling Cutting Final packing Paper making Pulp making Preparatory

7 7 Continuous Flow System Mass production in discrete manufacturing  In discrete manufacturing various components are manufactured in discrete fashion and the final product is obtained through an assembly process  In a mass production system, the volume of production is very high and the number of variations in the final product is low –Examples: »Automobile and two wheeler manufacturers, »Manufacturers of electrical components such as switches and health care products such as disposable syringes  The entire manufacturing is organised by arranging the resources one after the other as per the manufacturing sequence (known as product line structure)

8 8 Intermittent Flow System  Characterised by mid-volume, mid-variety products/services  Increases the flow complexities  Flow and capacity balancing are difficult but important –Process industries use batch production methods –Discrete industries use alternative methods of designing layout issues  Capacity Estimation is hard  Production Planning & Control is complex

9 9 Jumbled Flow System  Occurs on account of non-standard and complex flow patterns characteristic in certain systems –Highly customised items –customer orders for one or a few  Examples –turnkey project executor such as BHEL or L&T –customised manufacturing systems such as PCB fabricators, sheet metal fabricators, tool room operators and printing and publishing  Operational complexity arising out of jumbled flow is high

10 10 Types of Production systems 10 Types of Production Systems Job Shop Type of Production Batch Type of Production Mass Production Flow Continuous Production

11 11 Types of Production Systems Job Shop Type of Production  as per Customer demand, e.g. heavy m/c s,  low volume –high variety.  Use of general purpose m/cs  Highly skilled operators  Large inventory of material, tools, parts.  Detailed planning required.  Limitations high cost, production planning is complicated

12 12 Batch Type of Production: Lot Production of similar items – job passes through the functional departments in lots or batches. E.g : medicines.  Shorter production runs.  Plant and machinery are flexible.  Better utilization of plant and machinery  Limitations – production planning becomes complex.

13 13 Mass Production : manufacture of discrete parts and accessories using a continuous process is called mass production, Demand pattern known, Standard product, Large batches. Dedicated assembly lines. lines, E.g :TV Higher rate of production. Higher capacity utilization. Less skilled operators are required. Manufacturing cost per unit is low. Limitations ; breakdown of one m/c will stop entire prodn line. High investment.

14 14 Flow /Continuous Production : production facilities are arranged as per sequence of operations. Material is made to flow through sequence of e.g. Cement, Petrol/Diesel  Dedicated plant and machinery with Zero flexibility.  Material handling is fully automated.  Planning and scheduling is routine action.  High volume of production.  Limitations: High investment, no flexibility.

15 15 Low volume High Volume DISCRETEDISCRETE PROCESSPROCESS Manufacturing Reference Model JOB/ASSEMBLY Machine-Tools Farming Equipments Shutters Jewelry HIGH VOLUME/ REPETITIVE Electronic Components Spinning Mills Batteries Tyres BATCH/MIX Food Beverages, Wine Dairy Products Pharmaceuticals Paint PROCESS/FLOW Refineries Glass Graphite Paper Mills Steel Fertilizers 15

16 16 Product – Process Matrix Low Volume Low Standardisation One of a kind Multiple Products Low Volume Few Major Products Higher Volume High Volume High Standardisation Commodity Products Continuous Flow Connected Line Flow (Assembly Line) Disconnected Line Flow (Batch) Jumbled Flow (Job Shop) Satellite Launch Vehicle Machine Tools Auto electric parts Polyethylene None.

17 17 make-to-order assemble-to-order make-to-stock suppliersupplier engprod raw materialscomponentssemi finishedfinished goods standard customer driven engineer-to-order customercustomer Manufacturing Strategies 17


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