Abstract

Abstract Many researchers have suggested methods for the formation of machine cells/part families in group technology. However, few of these methods have addressed the possible existence of exceptional elements (EE) in a reasonable manner. EE can be the result of bottleneck machines whose processing is needed by parts assigned to more than one part family. They can also be caused by parts that require processing on machines assigned to more than one machine cell. The existence of EE in cell formation solutions is a nontrivial problem that requires interaction between machine cells intended to be independent for production efficiency. This paper presents a systematic method for identifying opportunities for reducing the number of intercell transfers caused by the existence of EE. The method recognizes how each EE in a cell formation solution may be involved in the creation of intercell transfers. The sequence of operation in each part routeing is also considered. The method then analyses the costs associat...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call