Article ID: | iaor1990487 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 4 |
Issue: | 1 |
Start Page Number: | 1 |
End Page Number: | 7 |
Publication Date: | Nov 1983 |
Journal: | Journal of Operations Management |
Authors: | Davis K. Roscoe, Kushner Deena D. |
A procedure is presented for calculating stochastic costs, which include operator (labor) and inventory costs, associated with dynamic line balancing. Dynamic line balancing, unlike the traditional methods of assembly and production line balancing, assigns operators to one or more operations, where each operation has a predetermined processing time and is defined as a group of identical parallel stations. The cost minimisation method developed in the article can be used to evaluate and compare the assignment of operators to stations for various assignment heuristics. The conditions which must be examined before using the cost evaluation method are yield, input requirements, operator requirements, scheduling requirements and output requirements. Yield reflects the output of good units at any operation. The input requirement accounts for units discarded or in need of reworking. The operator requirements define the calculation of operator-hours per hour, set the minimum number of operators at an operation, and require that the work is completed. The scheduling requirements ensure that operators are either working or idle at all times, and that no operator is assigned to more than one operation at any time. The calculation of the output reflects the yield, station speed, and work assignments at the last operation on the line. An application of the cost evaluation method is discussed in the final section of the article. Using a simple heuristic to assign operators, the conditions for yield, inputs, operators, scheduling and output are satisfied. The costs are then calculated for operators and inventories.