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MRPII and stand‐alone finite schedulers: the relationships

David Little (Senior Lecturer in Manufacturing Systems at the University of Liverpool, UK.)
Keith Porter (Senior Lecturer at Liverpool, John Moores University, UK.)
Peter C. Jarvis (PhD candidate and member of the Short‐term Scheduling Project Team at the University of Liverpool, UK.)
John G. Kenworthy (Manufacturing Control Systems Consultant and Visiting Professor in Industrial Studies at the University of Liverpool, UK.)

Integrated Manufacturing Systems

ISSN: 0957-6061

Article publication date: 1 February 1995

465

Abstract

Discusses the relationships between finite schedulers which operate on output from a higher level in a conventional MRPII system, and so‐called stand‐alone schedulers which essentially operate directly on orders. Presents two graphical models – a demand flow model and a flowpipe model – which help to explain the differences between such schedulers and are used to illustrate the key features of each. Coupled schedulers tend to work on demand which has already been smoothed or planned in some way and can be described as planning‐led, whereas stand‐alone schedulers work from unfiltered data, with the operator reacting to schedule quality (due‐date performance, resource activation levels, etc.) and thence adjusting resource and rerunning. Ascribes the growth of the stand‐alone scheduler, at least in part, to the greatly increased computing power available quite inexpensively on modern equipment.

Keywords

Citation

Little, D., Porter, K., Jarvis, P.C. and Kenworthy, J.G. (1995), "MRPII and stand‐alone finite schedulers: the relationships", Integrated Manufacturing Systems, Vol. 6 No. 1, pp. 22-26. https://doi.org/10.1108/09576069510076135

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1995, MCB UP Limited

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