Synopses & Reviews
This book covers the design and improvement of single and multistage production systems. Following the standard production planning and scheduling decision hierarchy, it describes the inputs and outputs at each level of the decision hierarchy and one or more decision approaches. The assumptions leading to each approach are included along with the details of the model and the corresponding solution. Modern system concepts and the engineering methods for creating lean production systems are included.
Synopsis
This text presents the basic system concepts while providing more detail and rigor than the conceptual descriptions found in many operation management texts. Mathematical decision models and tools for improving systems are described. In discussing production systems, the authors go beyond addressing the basic what questions, and provide guidance on how, when and why as well. While emphasizing planning models, the text delves into more hands-on engineering topics such as methods for setup time reduction, and fool proofing of production operations. The presentation follows the standard production system decision hierarchy. Modern philosophies such as time-based competition, lean manufacturing, and supply chain management are integrated into the discussion.
This text presents a modern view of production system design and analysis at a level appropriate for upper division undergraduates and beginning graduate students in industrial engineering or quantitative business schools.
Table of Contents
* The Industrial Enterprise
* Introduction to the Production System and the Role of Inventory
* Market Characterization
* Manufacturing Strategy and the Supply Chain
* Aggregate Planning
* Single Stage Inventory Control
* Decentralized Pull Systems
* Multi-Stage Production Systems: Materials Requirements Planning for Dependent Demand
* Multi-Stage Models
* Lean Manufacturing and the Just-in-Time Philosophy
* Shop Scheduling
* Shop Floor Control: Systems and Extensions