Escape Velocity Systems Food Processing ERP Profiled in Times Food Processing Journal
Released on: February 5, 2008, 6:24 am
Press Release Author: Thomas R. Cutler
Industry: Software
Press Release Summary: Escape Velocity Systems Food Processing ERP Profiled in Times Food Processing Journal
Press Release Body: The benefits of effective scheduling in the food processing industry are also unique and substantial. Good schedules take more time producing and less time performing cleanouts - resulting in increased output and higher revenues. In addition, risks associated with spoilage and cross contamination are reduced as there are the costs of storing products that are produced too early or shipped late. Even transport costs can be reduced by tightly integrating shipment schedules with production.
Manufacturing journalist, Thomas R. Cutler discusses the importance of effective scheduling in the food processing industry in the current issue of Times Food Processing Journal. In many ways food process production is similar to other industries. In the food processing industry the products must be produced on time to meet demand as production capacity is limited. Raw material purchasing and intermediate production must be coordinated as there are constraints limiting the equipment to be used for production. In addition, food process manufacturing poses a number of unique production scheduling challenges. There are spoilage concerns, cross-contamination must be avoided, cleanouts can be lengthy, intermediate storage is limited and conveyance equipment constrains material flow paths.
Defining production capacity, production rates and expected yields
Production equipment in food processing is extremely expensive and therefore limited. A facility's maximum production output is constrained by physical constraints such as the following:
. The number of machines available . The rates at which products are produced on each machine . The time lost to yield problems, changeovers, and equipment downtime.
Capacity is lost due to 'timing constraints' - where raw materials or intermediates are not available at the right time or when equipment is not staffed and is kept offline according to the hours of operation. In these situations equipment is idle by choice or at least according to 'plan'. Some of the physical capacity constraints are relatively static, which are ported directly into the ERP system. These constraints are as follows:
. Work centers with specific defined machines . Expected yield rates by product . Standard production rates by product and by work centre.
"Often the output rate and expected yield for a single product can vary depending upon the specific piece of equipment used. For example, one mixer may produce 250 gallons per batch while another produces 1,000 gallons per batch so the time to produce 'x' gallons varies based on the mixers chosen. This is handled by creating a lookup table that specifies the capacity, production rate and expected yield of each product on each machine," says Evan Garber, President of Escape Velocity Systems (www.evs-sw.com), which specializes in formula-based process manufacturing.
The term escape velocity refers to the speed that is necessary for an object to overcome gravity and soar into space. EVS provides direct applications for businesses looking for a catalyst, not just a software package. Process manufacturers require the best software solution coupled with industry experience that will accelerate the velocity with which they race towards their goals. The gravity of status-quo opposes aggressive, cutting edge organizations as they strive towards high quality and short lead time delivery while reducing inventories and operating costs.
Escape Velocity Systems www.evs-sw.com Evan Garber President solutions@evs-sw.com 303.494.1765 x114
Web Site: http://www.evs-sw.com
Contact Details: Escape Velocity Systems 2530 55th St. Suite 204 Boulder, CO 80301 303-494-1765