Detail Capacity Planning
For maximum manufacturing or
service delivery efficiency, you need a powerful planning tool that validates
your master schedules, material requirements, and project plans to ensure that
your resources are properly loaded. The tool that closes this loop is glovia.com
- Detail Capacity Planning.
Detail
Capacity Planning At-A-Glance
Detail Capacity
Requirements Generation
- Generates resource center loading and
operation schedules
- Multiple planning cycles
- Concurrent capacity views
- Unique planning options by cycle
- Driven by user-selected work queue
- Work Orders, Installation Orders, Service
Orders, firm planned orders, repetitive schedules and computer planned
orders from Master Production Scheduling, Material Requirements
Planning, or Project Resource Planning
Work Day
Calendar
- By resource center
- Current and simulated mode
- Establish normal work week and non-workday
calendar dates
Planning
Options
- Multiple planning cycles
- Current or simulated mode
- Select multiple locations for planning
- Select work load source orders
- Planning horizon start date
- Definition of phasing periods and days in each
period
- Options for finite or infinite scheduling mode
- Period load averaging
- Exclude queue times or move times
- Peg capacity to Project
Resource Planning material and Service Item's supply order
Analysis and
Adjustments
- Interactive analysis and modification of
orders in work queue
- View order dates and routing operation
schedules
- Revise loading factors and scheduling codes
- Review exceptions and reconcile scheduled
dates
- Regenerate schedules and loading from modified
queue
- Work queue includes current or simulated modes
- Optionally update source orders from modified
schedules for closed-loop planning
Loading
Factors
- Load based on labor or machine pace selection.
- Routings, run times and set-up times
- Scheduling sequence, move time and crew size
- Work center labor and machine capacities with
effectivity dates
- Efficiency factors, queue times
Capacity
Scheduling Rules
- Backward or forward scheduling
- User-defined scheduling
- Linear sequencing for sequential operations
- Concurrent sequencing for parallel operations
- Overlap sequencing allows
partial completions to start next operation
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