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Final assembly schedule (FAS) entries are needed when end products do not appear in the MPS. These end items are assembled to order or have several customer options that can be combined in various configurations. These products belong to the category of products with variants and options wherein many
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Finishing schedule may involve assembly but also final mixing, cutting, packaging etc. The FAS is prepared after receipt of customer order. FAS schedules the operations required to complete the product from the level where it is stocked (or master-scheduled) to the end-item level.
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FAS controls the portion of the business from fabricated components and sub-assemblies planned on the basis of forecast to customer-ordered shippable products in ATO environments.
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The final assembly schedule serves to plan and control final assembly and test operations. The following activities are generally included in the FAS:
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Khalid Sheikh (2003) 'Manufacturing resource planning (MRP II): with introduction to ERP, SCM and CRM'. New York: McGraw-Hill
Companies.
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e) scheduling the fabrication or purchase of any components not under MPS control but needed in final assembly
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shippable end-item products are assembled from few standard components (in modular construction and
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In make-to-stock (MTS) final assembly schedule is not needed as the MPS itself plans the end item.
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56:(MPS) for end-item components and final assembly schedules (FAS) for shippable products.
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In MTO business, it states the specific schedule for satisfying customer orders.
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The final assembly schedule is usually used for products that
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c) have short producrement or manufacturing lead-time
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137:Information technology management
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110:a) have relatively low volume
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142:Computer-aided engineering
84:Activities included in FAS
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100:f) packing
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39:Overview
33:ATO
21:FAS
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