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Production and Operations Management




                    Notes
                                       !
                                     Caution In order for a cell to be economical and practical in the long term, the machines
                                     must be closely grouped, and the cell must be flexible in its mix of capacity and must be
                                     big enough so any absent  employee does  not shut  it down,  yet  is  small enough  for
                                     employees to identify with the cell and understand the products and equipment.
                                   Although Cellular Layout is a catchy new term, the phenomenon itself is not new. For decades,
                                   large job shops have grouped equipment for high-volume parts or special customers. Similarly,
                                   assembly lines may group machines by type to make or modify a variety of parts that ‘feed into’
                                   the main assembly line.


                                          Example: Telco, Jamshedpur, has different machine shops and dye shops whose output
                                   is finally fed into the assembly line.
                                   When considering a new technique such as Cellular Layout, managers need to thoroughly look
                                   at past practices as a guide to changing the manufacturing environment.





                                     Notes  Cell manufacturing is also the building block of Flexible Manufacturing Systems
                                     (FMS). It is, in essence, FMS with some manual operations. The Cellular Layout principles
                                     are adopted  in FMS  because the  concepts make  it easier to process  large volumes  of
                                     information because of the decomposed manufacturing system; it is easier to manage the
                                     operational facilities compared to functional manufacturing due to limitation on cell size,
                                     and the technological compulsions often require grouping some operations like forging
                                     machines and heat treatment unit.

                                   The U-shaped assembly line: U-shaped assembly lines are being successfully used by Matsushita
                                   Electric Co. of Japan by using a single worker in the line. In addition, the U-shaped line reduces
                                   material handling as the entry and exit points of the material on the line are nearby. A trolley
                                   which brings the raw material for the line may take back the finished goods in a single round.
                                   Toyota’s ‘lean production’ system is a part of the generic system of ‘Cellular Manufacturing’.
                                   The ‘Toyota Production System’ called ‘lean production’ by some, has been heralded by many
                                   commentators as the future for competitive manufacturing. It is a team concept and incorporates
                                   a philosophy of constantly reducing production costs through the progressive elimination of
                                   waste. This waste is seen everywhere in the manufacturing operation, and includes excessive
                                   work or ‘overproduction’. This has given rise to the just-in time system (JIT).
                                   JIT is a simple principle that includes ‘produce and deliver finished goods just-in-time to be sold,
                                   sub-assemblies just-in-time to be  assembled into  finished goods,  and purchased  materials
                                   just-in-time to be transformed into finished parts’.

                                   Advantages and Disadvantages

                                   Some of the advantages of  Cellular Layouts are that  overall performance often increases  by
                                   lowering costs and improving on-time delivery. Quality should increase as well, though that
                                   might take other interventions beyond the layout change. Other advantages are given below:
                                   1.  Lower work-in-process  inventories,

                                   2.  A reduction in materials handling costs,
                                   3.  Shorter flow times in production,



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