Optimizing Plant-Line Schedules and an Application at Hidden Valley Manufacturing Company

Abstract

A plant line schedule specifies a plant's sustained batch operations over time with detail sufficient to manage all activities. Plantwide considerations include restrictions on how production centers can be formed from production lines, packaging lines, conveyers, and so forth; the cost and time of product-package item setups, changeovers, and shutdowns; honoring in-stock service levels, minimum inventory, and committed shipments; recognizing efficiency gains with longer batch runs; respecting crew constraints; and the costs of materials, labor, and carrying inventory. We developed a cost-minimizing optimization model, PROFITS, that features multiple independent time streams for various categories of events that mimic existing periodic reviews of operations. PROFITS is embedded in a graphical user interface that eases the grueling aspects of scheduling: preparing data, controlling scenarios, and visualizing results. At Hidden Valley Manufacturing Company, completing an eight-week plant-line schedule takes about an hour. This is much faster than manual scheduling was and the schedules are better.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 01, 2002
Accession Number
ADA487893

Entities

People

  • Gerald G. Jerry Brown
  • Ray L. Davis
  • Richard H. Duff
  • Robert F. Dell

Organizations

  • Naval Postgraduate School

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Ground and Sea Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Commerce
  • Computer Programming
  • Computers
  • Engineering
  • Gantt Charts
  • Graphical User Interface
  • Inventory
  • Linear Programming
  • Manufacturing
  • Materials
  • Mathematical Programming
  • Operations Research
  • Optimization
  • Production
  • Scheduling (Production)
  • Standards
  • User Interface

Fields of Study

  • Engineering

Readers

  • Neural Network Machine Learning.
  • Operations Research
  • Software Engineering