Ship Maintenance Processes with Collaborative Product Lifecycle Management and 3D Terrestrial Laser Scanning Tools: Reducing Costs and Increasing Productivity

Abstract

The current cost-constrained environment within the federal government and the Department of Defense (DoD) requires a defensible approach to cost reductions without compromising the productivity of core defense processes. Therefore defense leaders today must maintain and modernize the United States Armed Forces to retain technological superiority while simultaneously balancing defense budget cost constraints and extensive military operational commitments. At the same time, defense leaders must also navigate a complex information technology (IT) acquisition process. The DoD spends over $63 billion annually, or 14% of its total budget, on defense maintenance programs throughout the world (Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense [Logistics and Material Readiness], 2006). One such core process that is central to naval operations, is the ship maintenance process. This process alone accounts for billions of the overall Navy annual budget. There have been a series of initiatives designed to reduce the cost of this core process, including ship maintenance (SHIPMAIN), which was designed to standardize ship maintenance alterations in order to take advantage of the cost-savings learning curve. The main problem in SHIPMAIN has been that the normal cost-reduction learning curve for common ship maintenance items across a series of ship platforms has not yet been realized. The purpose of SHIPMAIN was to take advantage of this cost-savings learning curve over time. This study suggests that unless the SHIPMAIN process employs 3D Terrestrial Laser Scanning (3D TLS) and collaborative Product Lifecycle Management (collab-PLM) tools, SHIPMAIN will be unlikely to obtain the learning curve benefits.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 30, 2011
Accession Number
ADA543988

Entities

People

  • David Ford
  • Johnathan C. Mun
  • Thomas Housel

Organizations

  • Naval Postgraduate School

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Ground and Sea Platforms

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acquisition
  • Air Force
  • Business Administration
  • Cost Reductions
  • Department Of Defense
  • Engineering
  • Financial Management
  • Governments
  • Information Science
  • Information Systems
  • Maintenance
  • Management Personnel
  • Naval Operations
  • Navy
  • Risk Management
  • Shipbuilding
  • United States

Readers

  • Economics
  • Life Cycle Cost Analysis
  • Organizational Process Management (OPM).

Technology Areas

  • Directed Energy