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  HomeContents of Chinese Journal of Mechanical Engineering (English Edition),2007 No.1CONCURRENT PRODUCT PORTFOLIO PLANNING AND MIXED PRODUCT ASSEMBLY LINE BALANCING

BRYAN April

HU S Jack

KOREN Yoram

Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, USA

 

 

CONCURRENT PRODUCT PORTFOLIO PLANNING AND MIXED PRODUCTTT
ASSEMBLY LINE BALANCING*

 

Abstract: Reconfigurable products and manufacturing systems have enabled manufacturers to provide “cost effective” variety to the market. In spite of these new technologies, the expense of manufacturing makes it infeasible to supply all the possible variants to the market for some industries. Therefore, the determination of the right number of product variants to offer in the product portfolios becomes an important consideration. The product portfolio planning problem had been independently well studied from marketing and engineering perspectives. However, advantages can be gained from using a concurrent marketing and engineering approach. Concurrent product development strategies specifically for reconfigurable products and manufacturing systems can allow manufacturers to select best product portfolios from marketing, product design and manufacturing perspectives. A methodol-ogy for the concurrent design of a product portfolio and assembly system is presented. The objective of the concurrent product portfolio planning and assembly system design problem is to obtain the product variants that will make up the product portfolio such that oversupply of optional modules is minimized and the assembly line efficiency is maximized. Explicit design of the assembly system is obtained during the solution of the problem. It is assumed that the demand for optional modules and the assembly times for these modules are known a priori. A genetic algorithm is used in the solution of the problem. The basic premise of this methodology is that the selected product portfolio has a sig-nificant impact on the solution of the assembly line balancing problem. An example is used to validate this hypothesis. The example is then further developed to demonstrate how the methodology can be used to obtain the optimal product portfolio. This approach is intended for use by manufacturers dur-ing the early design stages of product family design.

Key words: Product portfolio Assembly system design Assembly line balancing Concurrent design and manufacturing Optimization

 


*Selected from Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Frontiers of Design and Manufacturing (ICFDM’2006). Received July 14, 2006; accepted November 13, 2006

 

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