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Development of a Methodology for Creating Families of PartsMarr, Gregory M. 14 May 1999 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis was to develop methodologies and procedures for the construction and use of CAD part families. This project uses the software CADDS5 created by Computervision, Inc., and its "Family of Parts" module. This software allows the creation of an entire family of similar parts using a single parametric master model and a text file containing the necessary parameters for each member of the family. CADDS5 users at Raytheon were surveyed to determine how they use standard parts, what types of standard parts are used, and typical modeling strategies. A set of criteria were developed to determine which groups of parts would be good candidates to be used as test cases. Four test cases were used to develop the methodology or procedure for the creation of families of parts. In addition, efficient use of these part families required the development of a set of search engines to allow the users to find parts more easily, and a parts server to generate new family members. The Family of Parts software in CADDS5 serves as a starting point for the creation of a usable library of standard parts. However, it has a poor user interface and has no system for part management and database administration. This thesis has made up for several of these shortcomings, and has created the core of a working library that can be easily used by all of the designers without requiring detailed knowledge of the details behind the implementation. The methodology developed during this project provides the necessary information for designers to create the majority of standard parts in use at Raytheon. For those who want to expand the library, it has provided useful information that will help them create high-quality parts that will work well with this system.
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An?lise do uso de t?cnicas modernas de gest?o de estoques de pe?as sobressalentes em uma ind?stria do setor sider?rgico. / Analysis of the use of modern techniques of inventory management of spare parts in a company in the steel field.Valentim, Alexandre Jos? Ramos 22 June 2007 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2007-06-22 / This paper work was focused on the inventory management of spare parts. This theme is
very relevant to the academic means due to the little national research and literature about
it. The main goal of this research is analyzing the use of the inventory management of
spare parts hybrid model in a company in the steel field. In order to do that, it was carried
out a critical review of the literature available, reviewing the fundamental concepts of the
inventory management, such as stock techniques and approaches (Economical Order
Quantity, Reorder Point, ABC, Just-in-Time and MRP), as well as the calculations needed
to reorder the stocks, in addition to other specific issues and main indicators in the spare
parts management. The methodology adopted was the field research, which allowed a
major deepening into the issues of the research. The company studied was selected due to
the importance of its inventory management techniques related to its maintenance activities
in the company s field of work. Presented the productive flow and the supply of the
company, detailing the processes related to the inventory management of spare parts,
including the functioning of the computing systems, as well as the calculi that support the
activities, and the analysis of the research results. In the critical analysis of the results, it
was made a confrontation with the theories presented and improvements were suggested in
the model of the strategic management of the company, with the goal of reducing the
values in stock and improving the users service. / Este trabalho foi realizado com foco na gest?o de estoques de pe?as sobressalentes, sendo
esse tema bastante relevante para o meio acad?mico devido a pouca pesquisa e literatura
nacional a respeito. O objetivo principal desta pesquisa ? a an?lise do uso do modelo
h?brido de gest?o de estoque de pe?as sobressalentes em uma empresa do setor sider?rgico.
Para isso foi realizada uma revis?o cr?tica da literatura dispon?vel, sendo revistos os
conceitos fundamentais para gest?o de estoques, como t?cnicas e abordagens de estoque
(Lote Econ?mico de Compra, Ponto de Ressuprimento, ABC, Just-in-time e MRP), bem
como os c?lculos necess?rios para reabastecer estoques, al?m das quest?es mais espec?ficas
para a gest?o de pe?as sobressalentes e principais indicadores. Como metodologia, optouse
pela utiliza??o da pesquisa de campo, que permitiu um maior aprofundamento das
quest?es da pesquisa. A empresa escolhida foi selecionada pela import?ncia das t?cnicas
de gest?o de estoques para suas atividades de manuten??o dentro do setor de atua??o.
Apresentado o fluxo produtivo e de abastecimento da empresa, com detalhamento dos
processos relacionados a gest?o de estoque de sobressalentes, incluindo o funcionamento
dos sistemas informatizados e os c?lculos que apoiam as atividades, e a an?lise dos
resultados da pesquisa. Na an?lise cr?tica dos resultados foi realizada uma confronta??o
com as teorias apresentadas e sugeridas melhorias no modelo de gest?o estrat?gica da
empresa, com o objetivo de diminui??o dos valores imobilizados em estoque e melhora dos
n?veis de atendimento aos usu?rios.
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Machine and component residual life estimation through the application of neural networksHerzog, Michael Andreas. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.Eng.)(Mechanical)--University of Pretoria, 2006. / Includes summaries in English and Afrikaans. Includes bibliographical references.
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Effektiviserad lagerstyrning av reservdelar inom hjälpmedelsförsörjning / Efficient inventory management of spare parts in the health care sectorStjärnström, Dan, Sundqvist, Andreas January 2013 (has links)
Syfte – Syftet med denna studie är att undersöka hur lagerstyrning av reservdelar inom hjälpmedelsförsörjning kan effektiviseras. Metod och genomförande – Den valda strategin för att uppfylla studiens syfte omfattades av att genomföra en fallstudie i samarbete med Hjälpmedelscentralen på Länssjukhuset Ryhov i Jönköping. Empiri från fallstudien har erhållits genom intervjuer och dokumentationsstudier. Insamlad data har analyserats gentemot det teoretiska ramverket och därmed genererat studiens resultat. Resultat – Studiens resultat visar inledningsvis på att rörlighet, volymvärde och kritiskhet är viktiga aspekter att beakta vid lagerstyrning av reservdelar inom hjälpmedelsförsörjning. Rörlighet och volymvärde har utgjort kriterier för en sortimentsövergripande ABC-klassificering, vilket resulterade i tre segment. Ett av dessa segment, kundorder, har så pass låg rörlighet att det ansågs lämpligt att endast beställa dessa reservdelar då behov uppstår. För de övriga segmenten bör lagerstyrningen utföras med beställningspunktsystem, dock med en viss skillnad när det gäller styrningens intensitet. Vidare anses det lämpligt att, för enskilda reservdelar, göra kvalitativa bedömningar avseende kritiskhet. Detta ska säkerställa att kritiska reservdelar får en mer uppmärksammad styrning för att därmed, i större utsträckning, undvika bristsituationer. Implikationer – I denna studie har det fastställts hur lagerstyrning av reservdelar inom hjälpmedelsförsörjning kan effektiviseras. För verksamheter som vill åstadkomma detta är det dock nödvändigt att identifiera de aspekter som, för verksamheten i fråga, är mest väsentliga. Vidare krävs det att tillgång till nödvändigt dataunderlag säkerställs. Begränsningar – Fallstudiedesignen utgjordes av en enfallsstudie där endast en analysenhet undersöktes. I och med att olika verksamheter har olika förutsättningar för lagerstyrning hade det varit lämpligt att inkludera fler fallverksamheter i undersökningen. Detta hade resulterat i en högre grad av generaliserbarhet. / Purpose – The purpose of this study is to investigate how to achieve efficient inventory management of spare parts in the health care sector. Methodology – To meet the purpose of the study a case study has been conducted in collaboration with Hjälpmedelscentralen at Länssjukhuset Ryhov in Jönköping. The empirical data have been obtained by methods such as interviews and documentation studies. By analysing empirical data in comparison with the theoretical framework the findings of the study was generated. Findings – Initially, the findings of the study implies that aspects such as usage frequency, annual dollar volume and criticality are important to consider in inventory management of spare parts in the health care sector. Usage frequency and annual dollar volume have been used as criteria for an assortment wide ABC-classification which resulted in three segments. One of these segments, customer order, has a very low usage frequency. Therefore it was considered appropriate to only order these spare parts when an actual need has occurred. The inventory management of the remaining segments should be carried out with a reorder point system. However, there is a certain difference regarding the intensity of the management between the two segments. Furthermore, it’s appropriate to conduct a classification based on criticality. This should ensure that critical spare parts get more attention and hence decreasing the risk of shortage. Implications – In this study, it has been determined how to achieve efficient inventory management of spare parts in the health care sector. For those who aim to do this it’s necessary to identify the aspects that are most important for the particular business. Furthermore, it’s important that these businesses ensure the availability of necessary data. Research limitations – The conducted case study was designed as a holistic single case study. Since businesses differ from each other it would have been appropriate to conduct a multiple case study. As a result of this, a higher degree of generalisation could have been achieved.
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How to re-design Supply Chains more effective when a web sales portal is applied? : Based on a web-sales implementation plan of Spare Parts in the Industrial Electronics IndustryHerrmann, Marc-Julian January 2011 (has links)
The following thesis counteracts the relationship of Supply Chain Design (SCD) and web-sales[1], and concentrates on the overall aim of “How to re-design Supply Chains more effective when a web sales portal is applied?”. In order to clarify this aim, following four research objectives are set: How does e-commerce connect to Supply Chain Design in general? What is required for a successful implementation of e-commerce? What are the costs and benefits by implementing e-commerce? Which potential risk factors in correspondence of the implementation of e-commerce may influence the whole SCD and e-commerce interaction process? Previous studies have not discussed the interaction of e-commerce and supply chain design on operational level at all, which accounts for a large portion of interests these days. When looking at the research objectives they have been solved in three process steps. First of all the general connection of e-commerce and Supply Chain Design had been analysed through an extensive literature review in form of i.e. suitable books and research papers. Results demonstrated that e-commerce helps to support and manage supply chain activities by offering relevant information. The connection between e-commerce and SCD insists of a close gearing. E-commerce helps to support and manage supply chain activities by offering relevant information about what kind of product is demanded, what is available in warehouses, which products are in the manufacturing processes, and which products will enter the physical facilities and customer sites. Following, research objectives two to four had been identified for which a literature review has created a firm basis on the status quo of current research studies. Combined with findings of developing a web-sales implementation plan for a leading group in power and automation technologies this work-out has been used as empirical research on how a real life company is carrying out these objectives. This plan had been worked out on-side the company, data has been obtained through interviews, observations, and internal system data. Requirements for a successful implementation of e-commerce are seen in strategic and organisational planning activities, as well as specific platform conditions. Concerning costs and benefits, monitoring and evaluating improvements, increasing customer satisfaction, and reducing order-cycle times stay in contrast to incidental fixed and variable costs which had been demonstrated through a detailed break-even analysis. Potential risk factors which had been identified can be countervailed through an appropriate risk management. Thirdly, the overall research question of “How to re-design Supply Chains more effective when a web sales portal is applied?” had been solved based on intermediate results of step one and two, combined with the project work-out, providing informative and sufficient data. The result is that in a first step a clear picture of which products and spare parts will be sold has to be defined. Secondly a precisely inventory management - discussing which parts to hold in stock, where to stock them, and how much to hold in stock - needs to be worked out. And thirdly, after analysing the possible and most plausible inventory strategy, possible distribution varieties need to be analysed. The most appropriate solution for the case company is represented in an Inventory-Distribution-Matrix. This research study has created a basis for the business unit of Power Electronics to improve possible efficiency. The knowledge and implementation steps operated for this implementation plan can be used for other business units in Switzerland and can be seen as a decision maker. Therefore this work-out has generated an enormous benefit for the case company. Instead of acting instinctively, decisions are based on qualitative and quantitative methodologies, data collection methods and data analysis techniques, and therefore follow a process strategy. [1]“Web-sales” in this context is associated with selling and buying information, products, or services via computer networks (Strader & Shaw, 1997), in this research study it is identical to “E-commerce”.
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Multi-item Two-echelon Spare Parts Inventory Control Problem With Batch Ordering In The Central WarehouseTopan, Engin 01 October 2010 (has links) (PDF)
In this dissertation, we consider a multi-item two-echelon inventory distribution system
in which the central warehouse operates with (Q, R) policy, and each local warehouse
implements base-stock policy. The objective is to find the policy parameters
minimizing the relevant system-wide costs subject to an aggregate mean response
time constraint at each facility.
We first propose an exact solution procedure based on a branch-and-price algorithm
to find the relevant policy parameters of the system considered. Then, we propose
four alternative heuristics to find the optimal or near-optimal policy parameters of
large practical-size systems. The first heuristic, which we call the Lagrangian heuristic,
is based on the simultaneous approach and relies on the integration of a column
generation method and a greedy algorithm. The other three heuristics are based on
the sequential approach, in which first the order quantities are determined using a
batch size heuristic, then the reorder levels at the central warehouse and the basestock
levels at the local warehouses are determined through the same method used for the Lagrangian heuristic. We also propose a lower bound for the system-wide
cost. Later, we extend our study to compound Poisson demand.
The performance of the Lagrangian heuristic is found to be extremely well and improves
even further as the number of parts increases. Also the computational requirement
of the heuristic is quite tolerable. This makes the heuristic very promising for
large practical industry-size problems. The performance of the sequential heuristics
is also satisfactory, but not as much as the Lagrangian heuristic.
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Competition And Collaboration In Service Parts Management SystemsUsta, Mericcan 01 December 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Inventory management policies of two independent dealers in a service parts system with transshipment is studied in this thesis. Dealers can collaborate by pooling inventory or service. Revenue is shared in transshipment, can sometimes be contrary to profit maximization of one of the parties albeit sum of profits is increased. To assess the benefits of inventory pooling under equilibrium strategies, and the effect of competition on profits, a Markov Decision Process is formulated. A simpler variant of the optimal four-index threshold policy is used to characterize the production, service and transshipment related inventory decisions. A game theoretical approach as well as notions from policy iteration is taken to find the best response policy and equilibrium policies of the dealers. Numerical study is conducted to investigate the effect of cost, revenue and demand parameters, as well as dealer asymmetricities on benefit of pooling, service levels and transshipment flows. Analysis shows that commission schemes fairly allocating transshipment value to the players, high customer traffic intensities, and low transshipment costs are most suited environments for pooling. System centralization is beneficial when the inventory holding costs are high, transshipment costs are low, customer traffic intensities are high or the commission structure is distracting a party. Competition, within the experimental settings, dampens about 45% of the benefits of pooling.
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The Benefit of Capacity Pooling for Repairable Spare PartsSahba, Pedram 16 August 2013 (has links)
Capacity pooling in production systems, in the form of production capacity or inventory pooling, has been extensively studied in the literature. While production capacity pooling has been proven to be beneficial, the impact of inventory pooling has been less significant. These results cannot be easily extended to repairable systems due to fundamental differences between repairable and production systems. For one thing, in repairable systems, the demand rate is a function of the number of operational machines, whereas it is exogenous and constant in production systems. In this Thesis, to serve different fleets of machines possibly at different locations, we study whether repair shop pooling is more cost effective than having dedicated on-site repair shops for each fleet. In the first model, we consider transportation delays and related costs, which have been traditionally ignored in the literature. We include on-site spare-part inventories that operate according to a continuous-review base-stock policy. Our numerical findings indicate that when transportation costs are reasonable, repair shop pooling is a better alternative. Next, we model a pooled repair shop that fixes failed components from different k-out-of-n:G systems. We permit a shared spare parts inventory serving all systems and/or reserved spare parts inventories for each system; we call this a hybrid model. The destination for a repaired component can be chosen either on a first-come-first-served basis or by following a static priority rule. Our findings show that both hybrid policies are more cost effective than having separate repair shops and inventories for each system. We propose implementing the multilevel rationing (MR) policy in systems with shared inventory. The MR policy prioritizes classes, and stops serving a class from inventory if the inventory level is below the inventory threshold identified for that class. When there is no inventory, the repaired component is sent to the highest priority class among those with down machines. To approximate the cost of the MR policy, we study an M/G/1//N queueing system serving multiple classes of customers with an unreliable server. Our numerical findings indicate that the MR policy performs as well as the epsilon-optimal policy and outperforms the hybrid policies.
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The Benefit of Capacity Pooling for Repairable Spare PartsSahba, Pedram 16 August 2013 (has links)
Capacity pooling in production systems, in the form of production capacity or inventory pooling, has been extensively studied in the literature. While production capacity pooling has been proven to be beneficial, the impact of inventory pooling has been less significant. These results cannot be easily extended to repairable systems due to fundamental differences between repairable and production systems. For one thing, in repairable systems, the demand rate is a function of the number of operational machines, whereas it is exogenous and constant in production systems. In this Thesis, to serve different fleets of machines possibly at different locations, we study whether repair shop pooling is more cost effective than having dedicated on-site repair shops for each fleet. In the first model, we consider transportation delays and related costs, which have been traditionally ignored in the literature. We include on-site spare-part inventories that operate according to a continuous-review base-stock policy. Our numerical findings indicate that when transportation costs are reasonable, repair shop pooling is a better alternative. Next, we model a pooled repair shop that fixes failed components from different k-out-of-n:G systems. We permit a shared spare parts inventory serving all systems and/or reserved spare parts inventories for each system; we call this a hybrid model. The destination for a repaired component can be chosen either on a first-come-first-served basis or by following a static priority rule. Our findings show that both hybrid policies are more cost effective than having separate repair shops and inventories for each system. We propose implementing the multilevel rationing (MR) policy in systems with shared inventory. The MR policy prioritizes classes, and stops serving a class from inventory if the inventory level is below the inventory threshold identified for that class. When there is no inventory, the repaired component is sent to the highest priority class among those with down machines. To approximate the cost of the MR policy, we study an M/G/1//N queueing system serving multiple classes of customers with an unreliable server. Our numerical findings indicate that the MR policy performs as well as the epsilon-optimal policy and outperforms the hybrid policies.
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Computer-aided manufacturing planning (CAMP) of mass customization for non-rotational part productionYao, Suqin. January 2003 (has links)
Dissertation (Ph.D.) -- Worcester Polytechnic Institute. / Keywords: Computer aided manufacturing planning; Object-oriented systems analysis (OSA); Feature; manufacturing resource capability; setup planning; multi-part fixture Includes bibliographical references (p.146-154).
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