Chapter 12 MRP and ERP The Objective of MRP (Material Requirements Planning) To ensure that the Manufacturing department has the correct amount of materials on.
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Transcript Chapter 12 MRP and ERP The Objective of MRP (Material Requirements Planning) To ensure that the Manufacturing department has the correct amount of materials on.
Chapter 12
MRP and ERP
The Objective of
MRP (Material Requirements Planning)
To ensure that the Manufacturing
department has the correct amount
of materials on hand at the time it is
needed.
Dependent Demand
Demand for items in inventory that
are subassemblies or component
parts to be used in the production of
finished goods.
Independent Demand
Demand for items that
are finished goods.
Overview of MRP
Cumulative Lead Time
The sum of the lead times that
sequential phases of a process
require, from ordering of parts or
raw materials to completion of final
assembly.
Cumulative Lead Time
Assembly
Subassembly
Fabrication
Procurement
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Assembly Time Chart
Procurement of
raw material D
Fabrication
of part E
Subassembly A
Procurement of
raw material F
Final assembly
and inspection
Procurement of
part C
Procurement of
part H
Procurement of
raw material I
1
2
3
= Order point
Subassembly B
Fabrication
of part G
4
6
7
5
Week Number
8
9
10
11
Available for
Delivery
Bill of Materials (BOM)
A listing of all of the raw materials,
parts, subassemblies, and
assemblies needed to produce one
unit of a product
Product Structure Tree
A visual depiction of the requirements
in a Bill Of Materials, where all
components are listed by levels.
Product Structure Tree
X
Level 0
Level 1
B(2)
Level 2
D(3)
Level 3
E(4)
C
E
E(2)
F(2)
MRP Lot Sizing Rules
Economic Order Quantity (EOQ)
Can lead to minimum costs if usage of
item is fairly uniform
This may be the case for some lower-level items that
are common to different ‘parents’
Less appropriate for ‘lumpy demand’ items because
inventory remnants often result
MRP Lot Sizing Rules
Lot-for-Lot (L4L) ordering
The order or run size is set equal to the
demand for that period
Minimizes investment in inventory
It results in variable order quantities
A new setup is required for each run
MRP Lot Sizing Rules
Fixed Period Ordering
Provides coverage for some
predetermined number of periods
Example MRP
Shutter
Frames (2)
Wood
sections (4)
Example MRP
Example MRP
Using the MRP
Pegging
The process of identifying the parent items
that have generated a given set of material
requirements for an item
Backflushing
Exploding an end item’s BOM to determine
the quantities of the components that were
used to make the item
Updating the System
An MRP is not a static document
As time passes
Some orders get completed
Other orders are nearing completion
New orders will have been entered
Existing orders will have been altered
Quantity changes
Delays
Missed deliveries
MRP Outputs: Primary
Primary Outputs
Planned orders
Order releases
A schedule indicating the amount and timing of
future orders
Authorizing the execution of planned orders
Changes
Revisions of the dates or quantities, or the
cancellation of orders
MRP Outputs: Secondary
Secondary Outputs
Performance-control reports
Evaluation of system operation, including deviations
from plans and cost information
Planning reports
Data useful for assessing future material
requirements
e.g., missed deliveries and stockouts
e.g., purchase commitments
Exception reports
Data on any major discrepancies encountered
E.g., late and overdue orders, excessive scrap rates,
MRP in Services
Food catering service
End item catered food
Dependent demand ingredients for each
recipe, i.e., bill of materials
Hotel renovation
Activities and materials “exploded” into
component parts for cost estimation and
scheduling
MRP Benefits
Enables managers to easily
determine the quantities of each component for a given order
size
To know when to release orders for each component
To be alerted when items need attention
Additional benefits
Low levels of in-process inventories
The ability to track material requirements
The ability to evaluate capacity requirements
A means of allocating production time
The ability to easily determine inventory usage via
backflushing
MRP Requirements
To implement an effective MRP system
requires:
A computer and the necessary software to handle
computations and maintain records
Accurate and up-to-date
Master schedules
Bills of materials
Inventory records
Integrity of data files
MRP II
Manufacturing resources planning (MRP
II)
Expanded approach to production resource
planning, involving other areas of the firm in the
planning process and enabling capacity
requirements planning
Most MRP II systems have the capability of performing
simulation to answer a variety of “what if” questions so they
can gain a better appreciation of available options and their
consequences