subject
Business, 25.05.2021 18:10 smilingntn33p7pqpp

Wheeled Coach, the world’s largest manufacturer of ambulances, builds thousands of different and constantly changing configurations of its products. The custom nature of its
business means lots of options and special designs—and a potential scheduling and
inventory nightmare. Wheeled Coach addressed such problems and succeeded in solving a
lot of them, with an MRP system. As with most MRP installations, however, solving one set
of problems uncovers a new set. One of the new issues that had to be addressed by plant
manager Lynn Whalen was newly discovered excess inventory. Managers discovered a
substantial amount of inventory that was not called for in any finished products. Excess
inventory was evident because of the new level of inventory accuracy required by the MRP
system. The other reason was a new series of inventory reports generated by the IBM
MAPICS MRP system purchased by Wheeled Coach. One of those reports indicates where
items are used and is known as the “Where Used” report. Interestingly, many inventory items
were not called out on bills of material (BOMs) for any current products. In some cases, the
reason some parts were in the stockroom remained a mystery. The discovery of this excess
inventory led to renewed efforts to ensure that the BOMs were accurate. With substantial
work, BOM accuracy increased and the number of engineering change notices (ECNs)
decreased. Similarly, purchase-order accuracy, with regard to both part numbers and
quantities ordered, was improved. Additionally, receiving department and stockroom
accuracy went up, all helping to maintain schedule, costs, and ultimately, shipping dates and
quality. Eventually, Lynn Whalen concluded that the residual amounts of excess inventory
were the result, at least in part, of rapid changes in ambulance design and technology.
Another source was customer changes made after specifications had been determined and
materials ordered. This latter excess occurs because, even though Wheeled Coach’s own
throughput time is only 17 days, many of the items that it purchases require much longer
lead times.
Discussion Questions:
1. Why is accurate inventory such an important issue at Wheeled Coach?
2. Why does Wheeled Coach have excess inventory, and what kind of a plan would you
suggest for dealing with it? 3. Be specific in your suggestions for reducing inventory and how to implement them

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on Business

question
Business, 22.06.2019 12:00
Areal estate agent is considering changing her cell phone plan. there are three plans to choose from, all of which involve a monthly service charge of $20. plan a has a cost of $.42 a minute for daytime calls and $.17 a minute for evening calls. plan b has a charge of $.52 a minute for daytime calls and $.15 a minute for evening calls. plan c has a flat rate of $80 with 275 minutes of calls allowed per month and a charge of $.38 per minute beyond that, day or evening.a. determine the total charge under each plan for this case: 150 minutes of day calls and 70 minutes of evening calls in a month. (do not round intermediate calculations. round your answer to 2 decimal places. omit the "$" sign in your response.)c. if the agent will use the service for daytime calls, over what range of call minutes will each plan be optimal? (round each answer to the nearest whole number.include the indifference point itself in each answer.)d. suppose that the agent expects both daytime and evening calls. at what point (i.e., percentage of total call minutes used for daytime calls) would she be indifferent between plans a and b?
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 19:00
The market demand curve for a popular teen magazine is given by q = 80 - 10p where p is the magazine price in dollars per issue and q is the weekly magazine circulation in units of 10,000. if the circulation is 400,000 per week at the current price, what is the consumer surplus for a teen reader with maximum willingness to pay of $3 per issue?
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 22:40
Effective capacity is the: a. capacity a firm expects to achieve given the current operating constraints.b. minimum usable capacity of a particular facility.c. sum of all the organization's inputs.d. average output that can be achieved under ideal conditions.e. maximum output of a system in a given period.
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 23:10
Amazon inc. does not currently pay a dividend. analysts expect amazon to commence paying annual dividends in three years. the first dividend is expected to be $2 per share. dividends are expected to grow from that point at an annual rate of 4% in perpetuity. investors expect a 12% return from the stock. what should the price of the stock be today?
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Wheeled Coach, the world’s largest manufacturer of ambulances, builds thousands of different and co...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 12.08.2020 05:01
question
Mathematics, 12.08.2020 05:01
Questions on the website: 13722359