Material Requirement Planning (MRP)
Material Requirement Planning (MRP)
Material Requirement Planning (MRP)
Content
MRP overview
Benefits of MRP
MRP application
Requirements of an effective MRP system
MRP system
The development of MRP
- MRP II – Manufacturing resources planning
- ERP – Enterprise resources planning
An Overview of MRP
MRP is a computer-based information system
designed to handle ordering and scheduling of
dependent-demand inventories, e.g.: raw materials,
component parts, and subassemblies…
Answer 3 questions:
What is needed?
How much is needed?
When is it needed?
MRP System
MRP Input Master MRP Processing MRP Output
Changes
Orders
Production
Forecast Schedule Planned-order
schedules
Order releases
Bill of MRP
Exception reports
Design Materials Computer
Programs
change
Planning reports
=>Questions:
- Which end items are to be produced;
- When these are needed;
- And in what quantities?
MRP Input
Master Production Schedule
The schedule indicates that 100 units of X will be
needed at the start of week 8
X 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Quantity 100
(units)
MRP Input
Bill of Materials (BOM)
- Called as Production Structure Tree
- Contains a list of all assemblies, subassemblies, parts and
raw materials that are needed to produce one unit of
finished product.
Level 0 X
Answer:
MRP Input
Inventory Records
Information on the status of each item by time period
- Gross requirements, scheduled receipts, expected
amount on hand;
- Details for each item: supplier, lead time, lot size;
- Changes due to stock receipts and withdrawals,
canceled orders…
=> Must be accurate and up-dated
Inventory Status Record for an Item in Inventory
Part No. Description Lead time Std. Cost Safety Stock
Gross Requirements
Inventory status
Scheduled receipts
segment
Projected available
balance
Planned order
releases
Order details
Subsidiary data
segment Pending action
Counters
Keeping track
MRP Processing
MRP Computer Program
Steps to follow:
- Specify end item requirement by the master schedule
- Explode them into time-phased requirement for
assemblies, parts, and raw materials using the BOM
offset by lead times;
- Determine net requirements in period t
MRP Processing
Step 1: specify end item requirement
X 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Quantity 100
(units)
Step 2: Time-phased requirement
Item X B C D E F G H I
Wee 1 3 2 3 2 4 2 1 1
k
MRP Processing
Step 2: Assembly Time chart
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Week 8
Procurement
of H
Fabrication of D
Procurement
of I Subassembly B
Final
Procurement of E
assembly
X
Procurement of G
Subassembly C
Fabrication of F
MRP Processing
Step 3: Determine net requirements in period
t:
Net Gross Projected
Safety
requirements = requirements - inventory in +
stock
in period t in period t period t
MRP Processing
Step 3: Determine net requirements in period t:
- Gross requirement: total expected demand for an item
or raw material in a time period
- Projected inventory: scheduled receipts at the
beginning of a period plus available inventory from last
period.
- Net requirements: actual amount needed in each time
period.
- Planned-order releases: planned amount to order in
each time period
- Planned-order receipts: quantity expected to be
received by the beginning of the period in which it is
shown
MRP Output
Primary reports:
Planned orders: amount and timing of future orders
Order releases: authorization for executing planned
orders
Changes: in date, quantity, cancellation, etc….
Secondary reports:
Performance-control reports
Planning reports
Exception reports
Example
A firm that produces wood shutters and bookcases has received
two orders for shutters: one for 100 shutters and one for 150
shutters. The 100-unit order is due for delivery at the start of week
4 of the current schedule, and the 150-unit order is due for delivery
at the start of week 8. Each shutter consists of two frames and four
slatted wood sections, and its assembly takes 1 week. The wood
sections are made by the firm, and fabrication takes 1 week. The
frames are ordered, and lead time is 2 weeks. There is a scheduled
receipt of 70 wood sections in week 1. Determine the size and
timing of planned-order released necessary to meet delivery
requirements under each of these conditions:
1. Lot-for-lot ordering
2. Lot-size ordering with a lot size of 320 units for frames and 70 units
for wood sections.
Development of MRP
Manufacturing resources planning (MRP II):
planning production resources, that involves other
functional areas of the firm in the planning process.