Yd. Kim et Ca. Yano, IMPACT OF THROUGHPUT-BASED OBJECTIVES AND MACHINE GROUPING DECISIONS ON THE SHORT-TERM PERFORMANCE OF FLEXIBLE MANUFACTURING SYSTEMS, International Journal of Production Research, 35(12), 1997, pp. 3303-3322
The most commonly-used objective in the literature for solving machine
loading and grouping problems in flexible manufacturing systems is th
e maximization of steady-state throughput. In reality, orders arrive d
ynamically and the mix of products changes frequently, raising questio
ns about the applicability of this objective in achieving shorter-term
measures of the output rate. Moreover, the loading and grouping probl
ems only determine which operations are to be performed on each machin
e, and whether any of the machines should be identically tooled so as
to allow multiple routeings for some jobs. The actual short-term perfo
rmance of the system also depends on scheduling and dispatching decisi
ons. We study the impact of the various objectives ostensibly related
to steady-state throughput and machine grouping decisions on the short
-term makespan performance (in a static setting). Computational result
s suggest that minimizing the maximum percentage overload (relative to
the optimal continuous workload allocation) across machine groups is
an excellent objective. The results also indicate that reducing the nu
mber of machine groups and balancing workloads among the machines help
to reduce makespan.