Business
Business, 19.10.2020 23:01, Kpthegoat

Positively Rivet Inc. is a small machine shop that produces sheet metal products. It had one line dedicated to the manufacture of light-duty vent hood shells, but because of strong demand it recently added a second line. The new line makes use of higher-capacity automated equipment but consists of the same basic four processes as the old line. In addition, the new line makes use of one machine per workstation, while the old line has parallel machines at the workstations. The processes, along with their machine rates, number of machines per station, and average times for a lone job to go through a station (not including queue time), are provided below. Over the past 3 months, the old line has averaged 350 parts per day, where one day consists of one 8-hour shift, and has had an average WIP level of 400 parts. The new line has averaged 680 parts per eight-hour day with an average WIP level of 350 parts. Management has been dissatisfied with the performance of the old line because it is achieving lower throughput with higher WIP than the new line, Your job is to evaluate these two lines to the extent possible with the data provided and identify potentially attractive improvement paths for each line by addressing the following questions: Compute rb, To, and Wo for both lines. Which line has larger critical WIP? Explain why.
Compute the best case and worst case performance benchmarks for the old and the new line.
Compare the performance of both lines to their corresponding practical worst case. What can you conclude about the relative performance of the two lines compared to their underlying capabilities? Is management correct in criticizing the old line for inefficiency?
If you were the manager in charge of these lines, what option would you consider first to improve the throughput of the old line? Of the new line?
Old Line
Process Rate per Machine (parts/hr) Number of Machines per station Time (minutes)
Punching 15 4 4.0
Braking 12 4 5.0
Assembly 20 2 3.0
Finishing 50 1 1.2
New Line
Process Rate per Machine (parts/hr) Number of Machines per station Time (minutes)
Punching 120 1 0.50
Braking 120 1 0.50
Assembly 125 1 0.48
Finishing 125 1 0.48

answer
Answers: 2

Other questions on the subject: Business

image
Business, 21.06.2019 17:00, giraffegurl
The risk-free rate is 7% and the expected rate of return on the market portfolio is 11%. a. calculate the required rate of return on a security with a beta of 1.92. (do not round intermediate calculations. enter your answer as a percent rounded to 2 decimal places.) b. if the security is expected to return 15%, is it overpriced or underpriced?
Answers: 2
image
Business, 21.06.2019 22:50, Zagorodniypolina5
Tara incorporates her sole proprietorship, transferring it to newly formed black corporation. the assets transferred have an adjusted basis of $240,000 and a fair market value of $300,000. also transferred was $10,000 in liabilities, $1,000 of which was personal and the balance of $9,000 being business related. in return for these transfers, tara receives all of the stock in black corporation. a. black corporation has a basis of $241,000 in the property. b. black corporation has a basis of $240,000 in the property. c. tara’s basis in the black corporation stock is $241,000. d. tara’s basis in the black corporation stock is $249,000. e. none of the above.
Answers: 1
image
Business, 22.06.2019 00:30, joshdunsbuns143
How did lani lazzari show her investors she was a good investment? (site 1)
Answers: 3
image
Business, 22.06.2019 01:00, allisonklinger1786
Need with my trade theory homework. i doubt what i wrote was right. consider a monopolistically competitive market for soft drinks in which n symmetric firms face the following demand function: q=s(1/n-b(p-(p with the straight line on which implies the marginal revenue functionmr=p-(q/sb)finally, suppose firms face the total cost functiontc=900,000+100qsuppose the market size, s, is 27,000,000, and the elasticity parameter b is 0.003.diagram the price and the average total cost in the market as a function of the number of firms. what are the equations for each curve, and why does each curve slope up or down? label the equilibrium number of firms and the equilibrium price in the diagram. why is this the equilibrium?
Answers: 1
Do you know the correct answer?
Positively Rivet Inc. is a small machine shop that produces sheet metal products. It had one line de...

Questions in other subjects: