Real-time capable production planning and control in the order management of built-to-order companies
- Manufacturing companies of the machinery and equipment industry find themselves more than ever exposed to a rapidly changing competitive environment. In particular, the resulting diversity of planning and control processes confronts organisations and information systems with a significant coordination effort. To this day, planning and execution of order processing – from offer processing to the final shipment of the product – is still a part of the production planning and control (PPC), which is almost entirely integrated into information systems. Though, in order to manage dynamic influences on processes within order processing, there can be found a deficiency in the processing of decision-relevant and real-time information. Partly, the reason for this is a missing or incorrect feedback of process relevant data, so that the planning results, gained by the use of information systems, differ to the current process situation. The concept of Manufacturing Resource Planning (MRP II) still represents the central logic of production planning and control. However, the centralised and push-oriented MRP II planning logic is not able to plan and measure dynamic processes adequately, which, due to diverse disturbances, often occur in production environments. Furthermore, specific weaknesses of MRP II-based systems are the lack of support for order releases, the planning principle based on average values and the successive planning method as well as the use of limited partial models. As a result a successive planning method leads to a dissection of PPC-tasks into smaller work packages and so strides away from a holistic approach and the achievement of an optimal solution. Similarly, a planning, focusing on a general business objective system, using a partial planning approach due to isolated considerations is not possible. Insufficient consideration of the current load horizon and the current capacity utilization, non-existing or delayed feedback on order progress as well as faults and poor availability and transparency of information can be named as further weaknesses of MRP II-based systems.
Author: | Günther SchuhORCiDGND, Tobias BroszeGND, Stefan KompaGND, Christoph MeierGND |
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ISBN: | 978-3-642-23859-8 |
Parent Title (English): | Enabling Manufacturing Competitiveness and Economic Sustainability |
Publisher: | Springer |
Place of publication: | Berlin [u. a.] |
Editor: | Hoda A. El Maraghy |
Document Type: | Conference Proceeding |
Language: | English |
Date of Publication (online): | 2023/09/08 |
Date of first Publication: | 2011/10/03 |
Release Date: | 2023/09/08 |
Tag: | cybernetics; order management; production planning and control; real-time capability |
GND Keyword: | KybernetikGND; ProduktionsplanungGND; ProduktionssteuerungGND; PPSGND; AuftragsabwicklungGND |
First Page: | 557 |
Last Page: | 562 |
FIR-Number: | SV5725 |
Name of the conference: | 4th International Conference on Changeable, Agile, Reconfigurable and Virtual production (CARV2011) |
place of the conference: | Montreal, Canada |
Date of the conference: | 02.10.2011-05.10.2011 |
Institute / Department: | FIR e. V. an der RWTH Aachen |
Produktionsmanagement | |
Dewey Decimal Classification: | 6 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften / 62 Ingenieurwissenschaften |