Jonathan Gross
27th July 2011, 23:56
A new blog entry has been added:
Infor ERP LN and Baan Planning Tip #4: Routings - The Final Data Requirement
In our previous ERP planning tip (http://baanboard.com/node/2916), we discussed the bill of materials (BOM), which discussion answered the following questions: which and how many components are needed to produce an item. This tip deals with routings, the final data set-up requirement. http://www.pemeco.com/v1000/sites/all/modules/wysiwyg/plugins/break/images/spacer.gif
Routings
Routings are the – manufacturing methods – the sequence of steps and related times that are needed to make an item. Production routings specify the ordered list of tasks used to manufacture a product. In addition to the standard routing, a product might have alternate routings (the selection of which depends on the situation). When a production work order is created to manufacture the product, one of the possible routings is chosen.
A typical routing is represented by a series of operation steps. Each step contains a task, various times related to the task (and other parameters), as well as the next operation step in the sequence.
For example:
http://baanboard.com/system/files/u20087/Routing_Table.png
Infor ERP LN and Baan Planning Tip #4: Routings - The Final Data Requirement
In our previous ERP planning tip (http://baanboard.com/node/2916), we discussed the bill of materials (BOM), which discussion answered the following questions: which and how many components are needed to produce an item. This tip deals with routings, the final data set-up requirement. http://www.pemeco.com/v1000/sites/all/modules/wysiwyg/plugins/break/images/spacer.gif
Routings
Routings are the – manufacturing methods – the sequence of steps and related times that are needed to make an item. Production routings specify the ordered list of tasks used to manufacture a product. In addition to the standard routing, a product might have alternate routings (the selection of which depends on the situation). When a production work order is created to manufacture the product, one of the possible routings is chosen.
A typical routing is represented by a series of operation steps. Each step contains a task, various times related to the task (and other parameters), as well as the next operation step in the sequence.
For example:
http://baanboard.com/system/files/u20087/Routing_Table.png