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A review and comparison of hybrid and pull-type production control strategies

In: Stochastic Modeling of Manufacturing Systems

Author

Listed:
  • John Geraghty

    (Dublin City University, Glasnevin)

  • Cathal Heavey

    (University of Limerick)

Abstract

In order to overcome the disadvantages of Kanban Control Strategy (KCS) in non-repetitive manufacturing environments, two research approaches have been followed in the literature in past two decades. The first approach has been concerned with developing new, or combining existing, pull-type production control strategies in order to maximise the benefits of pull control while increasing the ability of a production system to satisfy demand. The second approach has focused on how best to combine Just-In-Time (JIT) and Material-Requirements-Planning (MRP) philosophies in order to maximise the benefits of pull control in non-repetitive manufacturing environments. This paper provides a review of the research activities in these two approaches, presents a comparison between a Production Control Strategy (PCS) from each approach, and presents a comparison of the performance of several pull-type production control strategies in addressing the Service Level vs. WIP trade-off in an environment with low variability and a light-to-medium demand load.

Suggested Citation

  • John Geraghty & Cathal Heavey, 2006. "A review and comparison of hybrid and pull-type production control strategies," Springer Books, in: George Liberopoulos & Chrissoleon T. Papadopoulos & Barış Tan & J. M. Smith & Stanley B. Gershwin (ed.), Stochastic Modeling of Manufacturing Systems, pages 307-329, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-540-29057-5_13
    DOI: 10.1007/3-540-29057-5_13
    as

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