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- (TCO 4) The two different approaches to load work centers in job-shop scheduling are
- (TCO 2) The priority rule where jobs are processed according to the smallest ratio of due date to processing time is
- (TCO 2) A scheduling rule used for sequencing jobs through two work centers is
- (TCO 3) The owner and operator of the local franchise of Handyman, Inc., has four jobs to do today, shown in the order they were received:……If he uses the first-come, first-served (FCFS) priority rule to schedule these jobs, what will be the average completion time?
- (TCO 5) The ultimate goal of JIT operations is to have
- (TCO 6) Building up an inventory of standard parts or modules instead of immediately producing the finished end items is the essence..
- (TCO 7) A kanban card is used to signal that
- (TCO 10) The type of processing system that is used for highly standardized products is
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- (TCO 8) Does cellular manufacturing apply best to repetitive, high-volume product or nonrepetitive, low-volume product? Explain and give an example.
- (TCO 11) Validate or invalidate the statement that although inventories are maintained, the goal of lean operations is to maintain a minimum of safety stock.
- (TCO 9) Elaborate on the statement: “The output of the system cannot exceed the output of the bottleneck operation(s).”
- (TCO 4) Differentiate between infinite loading and finite loading as two major approaches used to load work centers.
- (TCO 12) Explain why batch process helps maximize worker efficiency.
- (TCO 2) Refer to the following data for jobs waiting to be processed at a single work center (jobs are shown in order of arrival):…………What is the schedule sequence using the first-come, first-served (FCFS) priority rule?
- (TCO 10) Respond to the question: “Which is better, MRP or JIT?”
- (TCO 1) The design of the MPC system is influenced by some key features of market demand and product design. Name the key features that will lead to a make-to-stock system and explain the rationale.
- (TCO 6) Market requirements drive the choice of the shop floor system approach. Describe and explain the type of market requirements that would be suitable for an MRP-based system, along the lines of product design, product variety, and product volume per period, product mix changes, and delivery schedule changes.
- (TCO 10) Manufacturing strategy also drives the choice of shop floor system. Describe and explain the strategies that lend themselves to a JIT-based system, from the perspective of WIP, changeover cost, and process choice.