I work for a smaller privately owned company. I am coming up on 20 years here. We are an OEM of industrial equipment including CNC milling machines. I am an Engineer and don't have a real strong understanding of business operating systems and MRP systems but I have a question. To date, we have used "Phantom" parts and "real" parts in our BOM structure. Pantom parts and assemblies have a bom structure but do not have routings/work orders tied to them. For a typical machine, we might have 10-20 "Real" assemblies, usually larger machining assemblies or sub assemblies that get completely assembled at a certain location. So for a typical machine going thru the shop that might have 2500 components, there are 10-20 work orders with accompanied cut lists, routing lists, etc.
We have a new "team member" who has come from a different background and is amazed we can make anything work. He is making a strong push to make every part and assembly "real" with associated work orders/routings. The advantage, supposedly, is being able to track actual time required to make any and every part, grouping of like components at the saw station, and determining economic order quantities. Great ideas, in theory.
I've been around long enough to see many changes in our manufacturing environment. In the last 10 years we have made many changes similar to this and have even hired consultants, twice, who were polar opposites in their manufacturing methodology. We (our management staff) drank the Kool Aid and it was a disaster both times. Engineering was forced to totally change our bom structures, once making assemblies of parts by manufacturing cell, totally ignoring the fact that drawings are required to show how to actually assemble something. Obviously, the world isn't perfect and no matter what you do, problems will arise. We have been very successful to date, despite all this and I am all for making things better but I'm having a hard time understanding how we will make this work by making everything "real". It seems the shop will get overwhelmed with work orders and spend more time punching in and out of jobs that they will getting any work done.
There is an immediate push for Engineers to make a change in how we structure our boms. Right now, if we have a weldment, the bom will call out a raw material part number, cut to a length. There is a push to create a new make part number and drawing for any part cut on the saw. This is another level to our boms and on a typical machine will require about 120 additional boms and drawings. In addition, the manufacturing engineers will have that many more parts to route, etc.
I don't see who will benefit from this, but I will be the first to admit I might be stuck in my ways. I'm trying to give the new guy the benefit of the doubt and am all for making things better. I just have the funny feeling in my gut this will be another push for change without any benefit.
Does anyone have insight into this topic of phantom vs real parts and creating drawings for every part?
Thanks
We have a new "team member" who has come from a different background and is amazed we can make anything work. He is making a strong push to make every part and assembly "real" with associated work orders/routings. The advantage, supposedly, is being able to track actual time required to make any and every part, grouping of like components at the saw station, and determining economic order quantities. Great ideas, in theory.
I've been around long enough to see many changes in our manufacturing environment. In the last 10 years we have made many changes similar to this and have even hired consultants, twice, who were polar opposites in their manufacturing methodology. We (our management staff) drank the Kool Aid and it was a disaster both times. Engineering was forced to totally change our bom structures, once making assemblies of parts by manufacturing cell, totally ignoring the fact that drawings are required to show how to actually assemble something. Obviously, the world isn't perfect and no matter what you do, problems will arise. We have been very successful to date, despite all this and I am all for making things better but I'm having a hard time understanding how we will make this work by making everything "real". It seems the shop will get overwhelmed with work orders and spend more time punching in and out of jobs that they will getting any work done.
There is an immediate push for Engineers to make a change in how we structure our boms. Right now, if we have a weldment, the bom will call out a raw material part number, cut to a length. There is a push to create a new make part number and drawing for any part cut on the saw. This is another level to our boms and on a typical machine will require about 120 additional boms and drawings. In addition, the manufacturing engineers will have that many more parts to route, etc.
I don't see who will benefit from this, but I will be the first to admit I might be stuck in my ways. I'm trying to give the new guy the benefit of the doubt and am all for making things better. I just have the funny feeling in my gut this will be another push for change without any benefit.
Does anyone have insight into this topic of phantom vs real parts and creating drawings for every part?
Thanks