9 Process Layout
9 Process Layout
M Grinding
M G G
Assembly G A A A G G G
What is a Layout?
Layout refers to the physical arrangement of economic activity centers for processes within a facility. A center can be anything that consumes space.
The Layout decisions are: What centers are needed? How much space and capacity are needed? Layout Configuration? Where to locate them?
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Strategic Issues
Good layouts improve productivity and efficiency. Altering a layout can affect an organization and how well it meets its competitive priorities in the following ways:
1. Increasing customer satisfaction and sales at a retail
store.
2. Facilitating the flow of materials and information
3. Increasing the efficient utilization of labor and
equipment.
4. Reducing hazards to workers
5. Improving employee morale 6. Improving communication
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Basic Layouts
Fixed Position
Line-Flow (Product) Flexible-Flow (Process) Hybrid Retail
Not directly concerned with the transformation process. Directly concerned with layout of the transformation process.
Warehouse
Office
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We are going arrange activity centers to optimize workflow and time utilization, but this list of intangible factors is also very important and very much affected by the layout.
Grinding
Forging
Lathes
Painting
Welding
Drills
Office
Milling machines
Foundry
Station 1
Station 2
Station 3
Station 4
Also known as a product-focused layout because work (people, workstations, machines) are focused on the product as it moves down the line.
Warehouse/Storage Layouts
Objectives:
1. Optimal utilization of storage space at
minimum cost 2. Minimizing the cost of handling and moving materials and the cost of storing them. Flows are to and from (in and out) of the warehouse rather than in between internal areas.
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To solve the layout, divide the # of trips each department makes by the number of areas in that department to get trips-per-area. Then prioritize the departments by the # of trips per area.
G G
D D
D D
A A
A C
C F
B
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Retail Layout
Objectives:
1. Maximize the net profit per square
Workers & equipment move to and from the product. Poorest space utilization Most difficult type of layout to make efficient. Process is the extreme in Low-volume, High 2013 Lew Hofmann variety.
Disadvantages
Higher labor skills are needed Higher inventory and inventory-related costs Higher costs of moving materials since more movement is required. Longer processing time (start to end) Poor utilization of equipment.
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Two types of
CLOSENESS MATRICIES
(To-From matrices)
A A B C D E F
B 20
C 10
D 20 15
E 75
F 80 90
70
20 20 80 10 75 15 90 70
Values are usually distances between two areas, but could be some other relative measure of closeness such as travel time, steps needed, trips per period of time, etc.
Step 2: Develop a Block plan A plan that indicates the placement of each department.
Department interactions (Trips per day)
20 20 80 10 75 15 90 70
Determine the distance between each interacting department using rectilinear distance.
Dept. Trips Pair Per-Day A,B 20 A,D 20 A,F 80 B,C 10 B,E 75 C,D 15 C,F 90 D,E 70 Current Distance 3 2 2 2 2 1 3 1 Total Distance 60 40 160 20 150 15 270 70 785 P
5 6 2 7 3 8 1 4
Multiply trips-per-day times the distance between areas to get total distance traveled.
Prioritize the department pairs based on total distance traveled.
Euclidean
Rectilinear
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Dept. Trips Current Total P Pair Per Day Distance Distance A,B 20 3 60 5 A,D 20 2 40 6 A,F 80 2 160 2 B,C 10 2 20 7 B,E 75 2 150 3 C,D 15 1 15 8 C,F 90 3 270 1 D,E 70 1 70 4 785 Existing Layout B D C F E A New Layout E D C F A B
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Dept. Trips Current Total P New Total Pair Per Day Distance Distance Distance Distance A,B 20 3 60 5 1 20 A,D 20 2 40 6 1 20 A,F 80 2 160 2 1 80 B,C 10 2 20 7 3 30 B,E 75 2 150 3 1 75 C,D 15 1 15 8 1 15 C,F 90 3 270 1 1 90 D,E 70 1 70 4 1 70 785 400 A 47.7% improvement Existing Layout B D C F E A New Layout C D E F A B
Space Planning
More Hybrids
In addition to the common fixed-position hybrids that combine flexible flow and/or line flow with a fixed position situation, there are other hybrids that have characteristics of both a flexible-flow and a line-flow.
One-worker, multiple-machines (OWMM) cell is a one-person cell in which a worker
operates several different machines simultaneously to achieve a line flow at that particular workstation.
Machine 1
Materials in
Machine 5
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Group Technology
A Hybrid Layout technique used to make flexible flows more efficient.
A low-volume, flexible-flow process that uses multiple line-flows. Parts/products that have similar processing requirements are grouped into line flows. One-Worker, Many-Machines is one technique. Material Inventory is reduced Work-in-process Inventory is reduced Work flow is simplified Floor space is optimized
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M Grinding
M G G
Assembly G A A A G G G
L Cell 1
M Cell 2 M
G A
Assembly area A
Receiving
L Cell 3
Shipping
Office Layouts
People problems dominate office layouts. Most formal procedures for designing office layouts try to maximize the proximity of workers whose jobs require frequent interaction. Privacy is another key factor in office design. Three basic types of office layouts: 1. Traditional (Private offices such as for faculty in
the School of Business or for attorneys in a law firm) 2. Office Landscaping (cubicles) 3. Activity Settings (Gym, Library) Where workers move from area to area depending on the type of work they need to do. 2013 Lew Hofmann
Two types of line flows that can be balanced Type Nature Flow Balancing
Cutting, milling, machining, drilling, etc.
Note: Waiting lines cannot be balanced because there is no work being done in the line.
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Line Balancing
The work that one person or one machine does should be balanced (in terms of time) with the work that another person or machine does on that line.
Work Elements
A work element is the smallest unit of work that can be done independently.
An element may be a person or a machine, or one worker operating many machines (OWMM). The goal in line balancing is to combine work elements into work stations so that each workstation has the same work load. (Or approximately the same work load.) A workstation may be one work element or many work elements.
The minimum number of workstations required for 2013 Lew Hofmann each line flow must be calculated.
Immediate Predecessors
The work element that must be completed immediately before the next element can begin. A diagram of work elements and their relationships is called a Precedence Diagram. (Similar to Project Management) Work elements are denoted by nodes (circles or squares), and contain the time required to perform that work.
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Precedence Table
A precedence table lists all of the work elements and the immediate predecessors, if any, of each element.
Work Elem. A B C D E F G H I J Time (seconds) 40 80 30 25 20 15 120 145 130 115 720 Predecessor None A D,E,F B B B A G H C,I
Precedence Diagram
D 25 B 80 A 40 E 20 C 30
G 120
Work Elem. A B C D E F G H I J Time (seconds) 40 80 30 25 20 15 120 145 130 115 720 2013 Lew Hofmann Predecessor None A D,E,F B B B A G H C,I
If the cycle time is exceeded at any workstation, the desired output (quota) for the shift cannot be achieved. Line balancing focuses on combining work elements into equally-balanced workstations so as to best meet the desired output. In this example the desired output is given as 192 widgets per 8-hour shift.
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Work Elem. A B C D E F G H I J
= 4.8 workstations
The number of workstations must be a whole number, so in this case 4.8 has to be rounded up to 5 work stations.
(The theoretical # of workstations is thus 4.8, but the actual number of workstations has to be 5. Thus the line will not be 100% efficient.)
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Balance Delay
In most situations, as in the previous example, it is impossible to have a 100% balanced line. Usually because the theoretical minimum # workstations ends up being a fraction, and must be rounded up. or because it takes more than the minimum number of workstations to group all of the work elements. A 100% balanced line would be 100% efficient. No one is waiting for anyone else. (Zero balance delay) Balance delay is the amount (%) you fall short of 2013 Lew Hofmann 100% efficiency. (There is some idleness.)
Desired Output = 192 per 8 hr shift Cycle Time = 150 Minimum # workstations = 5
Work Elem. A B C D E F G H I J Time (seconds) 40 80 30 25 20 15 120 145 130 115 720 Predecessor None A D,E,F B B B A G H C,I
Computing Efficiency
Sum of Element Times
(Min. # Workstations x Cycle Time)
720
= .96
(5 x 150)
96% efficient Efficiency can also be computed by dividing the minimum # of workstations by the actual number needed. In this case, 4.8 workstations is 96% of 5 workstations. (4.8 / 5 = .96)
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Balance Delay
Balance Delay is 100% - Efficiency 100% - 96% = 4% Balance Delay
In this example, 4% of the time there are idle workstations. This is accounted for by the fact that we cant have exactly 4.8 workstations. A perfectly balanced line is, by definition, 100% efficient and has zero balance delay.
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Establishing Workstations
Group the 10 work elements into five workstations, with each as close to the 150 second cycle time as possible.
D 25 B 80 A 40 E 20
C 30
G 120
J 115 F 15 I 130
Start with the work element that has the highest time and work down.
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H 145
In this example, there are no constraints for grouping work elements. In the real world, there would be many more elements and many constraints.
Balancing
Green Grass, Inc.
D
B 30 A 40 C 50 G
2007 Pearson Education
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H 20 E
40 6
F 25 I 18
15
Desired Output is 60 units per hour. Cycle Time (c) is 60 seconds per unit.
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Desired Output is 60 units per hour. Cycle Time is 60 seconds per unit.
It must be rounded up to 5 stations Idle time is the total unproductive time for all stations in the assembly of each unit. Efficiency (%) is the ratio of productive time to total time.
Efficiency = [ 244 / 5 (60) ]100 = 81.3% (or 4.067/5 = .813)
Balance Delay is the amount by which efficiency falls short of 100%. (100% - 81.3%) = 18.7%
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The goal is to cluster the work elements into 5 workstations so that the number of work-stations is minimized, and the cycle time (c) of 60 seconds is not violated. Here we use the trial-and-error method to find a solution, although commercial software packages are also available.
Line Balancing
Green Grass, Inc.
D
B H 20 E S4
40 6
S5
S1 A 40
c = 60 seconds/unit TM = 5 stations Efficiency = 81.3%
2007 Pearson Education
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30 S3 S2 C 50 F 25
I G 15 18
Trips
250 180 390
Areas
2 1 3
D
E F G
Dock
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320
100 190 220
Aisle
4
1 2 1
Homework Problem # 2
The closeness matrix below shows the daily trips between six department offices. The block diagram shown is one solution being proposed. 1. Just looking at the matrix, which two offices should be located closest? 2. What is the total weighted-distance for the proposed layout? 3. Can you find a better layout?
Balance Delay
Group the work elements into the Theoretical Minimum # of work stations.
Work Element A B C D E F G H
Time (Sec.) 20 55 25 40 5 35 14 40
Work Element A B C D E F G H I J K L
Time (min) 3 5 2 7 7 6 2 3 8 6 3 8
B. What is the impact on your solution if the time for work element D increases by 3 minutes? E. What is the impact if the time for element D decreases by three minutes?
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