One unit of A is made of two units of B, three units of C, and two units of D. B is composed of one unit of E, and two units of F. C is made of two units of F, and one unit of D. E is made of two units of D. Items A, C, D, and F have one-week lead times; Band E have lead times of two weeks. Lot-for-lot (L4L) lot sizing is used for Items A, B, C, and D; lots of sizes 50 and 180 are used for Items E and F, respectively. Item C has an on-hand (beginning) inventory of 15; D has an on-hand inventory of 50; all other items have zero beginning inventories. We are scheduled to receive 20 units of Item E in Week 2; there are no other scheduled receipts. Construct simple and low-level-coded bill-of-materials (product structure tree) and indented and summarized parts lists.If 20 units of A are required in Week 8, use the low-level-coded bill-of-materials to find the necessary planned order releases for all components.

Short Answer

Expert verified

A bill of materials (BOM) is a detailed description of the raw resources, parts, and instructions needed to build, produce, and fix a good or service.

Step by step solution

01

Diagram of product structure tree and low-level coded product structure tree

The Product structure tree:

The low-level coded product structure tree:

02

Summarized list

The image shown below:

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free