Material Requirements Planning: ISQA 459 Class 4 Mellie Pullman
Material Requirements Planning: ISQA 459 Class 4 Mellie Pullman
Material Requirements Planning: ISQA 459 Class 4 Mellie Pullman
Planning
ISQA 459 Class 4 Mellie Pullman
Materials Requirements
Planning
Material Requirements Planning
(MRP)
MRP Logic and Product Structure
Trees
MRP Example
Lot Sizing in MRP Programs
Material Requirements
Planning
Materials requirements planning (MRP)
is the logic for determining the number
of parts, components, and materials
needed to produce a product.
MRP provides time scheduling
information specifying when each of the
materials, parts, and components
should be ordered or produced.
Dependent demand drives MRP.
MRP is a software system.
Example of MRP Logic and
Product Structure Tree
Given the product structure tree for “A” and the lead time and demand
information below, provide a materials requirements plan that defines
the number of units of each component and when they will be needed.
Lead Times
Product Structure Tree for Assembly A A 1 day
B 2 days
A C 1 day
D 3 days
E 4 days
F 1 day
B(4) C(2)
Demand
Day 10 50 A
D(2) E(1) D(3) F(2) Day 8
Day 6
20 B (Spares)
15 D (Spares)
First, the number of units of “A” are scheduled backwards to
allow for their lead time. So, in the materials requirement plan
below, we have to place an order for 50 units of “A” in the 9th
week to receive them in the 10th week.
Day: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
A Required 50
Order Placement 50
LT = 1 day
Next, we need to start scheduling the components that make up “A”. In
the case of component “B” we need 4 B’s for each A. Since we need 50
A’s, that means 200 B’s. And again, we back the schedule up for the
necessary 2 days of lead time.
Day: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
A Required 50
Order Placement 50
B Required 20 200
Order Placement 20 200
LT = 2
Spares
A 4x50=200
B(4) C(2)
A
Part D: Day 6
40 + 15 spares
B(4) C(2)
Master
Engineering
production Inventory
design
schedule transactions
changes
(MPS)
Reports
Bill of Materials (BOM) File
A Complete Product Description
Materials
Parts
Components
Production sequence
Modular BOM
Component or Subassemblies BOM
Planning BOM or kits
create an artificial parent to the BOM used for
inexpensive items like washers or pins to group.
Explosion: revealing the requirements for each
component.
Coding
If identical items
exist at various
levels in the BOM:
Item is coded at
lowest level at which
it occurs
D (Level 2 or Level
3)
This number
identifies the part at
the lowest level of
usage.
Inventory Records File
Buckets= time units in MRP system
Week bucket vs. day bucket
Each inventory item carried as a separate
file
Status according to “time buckets”.
Pegging
Identify each parent item that created demand.
Parent vs. child
Parent= Items above the current level
Child = Items below the current level
Primary MRP Reports
Planned orders to be released at a future
time.
Order release notices to execute the
planned orders.
Changes in due dates of open orders due
to rescheduling.
Cancellations or suspensions of open
orders due to cancellation or suspension of
orders on the master production schedule.
Inventory status data.
Secondary MRP Reports
Planning reports, for example,
forecasting inventory requirements
over a period of time.
Performance reports used to
determine agreement between actual
and programmed usage and costs.
Exception reports used to point out
serious discrepancies, such as late or
overdue orders.
Additional MRP Scheduling
Terminology
Gross Requirements: needed during each period.
Scheduled Receipts: Existing orders that arrive at beginning
of period.
On-hand or available balance:
(depending on software convention, could be at the beginning of
each period or end):
Book: Inventory balance at end of each period.
Net requirements: What is need to meet requirements and
safety stock.
Planned order receipt: arrives at beginning of period.
Planned order release: Addresses lead time.
MRP Examples
Closed Loop MRP
Production Planning
Master Production Scheduling
Material Requirements Planning
Capacity Requirements Planning
No
Realistic? Feedback
Feedback
Yes
Execute:
Capacity Plans
Material Plans
Lot Sizing in MRP
Programs
Lot-for-lot (L4L)
Economic order quantity (EOQ)
Least total cost (LTC)
Least unit cost (LUC)
Part Period Balancing-changing lot
sizes to reflect requirements in the
future (how many periods should be
combined to reduce cost)
MRP Game
Different types of lot sizes
Tinker Toy Lawn Mower