equipment replacement four really great models 1. deterministic age replacement 2. minimal repair...

36
Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1.Deterministic Age Replacement 2.Minimal Repair Model 3.Repair versus Replace 4.Block Replacement

Upload: sibyl-casey

Post on 14-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Equipment Replacement

Four Really Great Models1.Deterministic Age Replacement2.Minimal Repair Model3.Repair versus Replace4.Block Replacement

Page 2: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Applications Continuous operating equipment

Transportation Systems Radar sites Power generating equipment Computers and communications systems

Intermittent operating equipment Vehicles Aircraft Appliances and entertainment components Lighting Systems

Page 3: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Deterministic Age Replacement

Section 12.6 with extensions

When to replace?When to replace?

Page 4: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Some Very Good Assumptions

Equipment is used continuously or time is measured in operating units

Negligible downtime for repair and maintenance

Infinite planning horizon Identical replacement equipment Only maintenance and replacement costs are

considered Objective is to minimize long-run costs Time value of money not addressed

Page 5: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

A Simple Model Let t = the decision variable, age of equipment at

replacement time (length of the replacement cycle) K = replacement cost C(u) = maintenance cost rate ($/unit time) at age u Cost per replacement cycle of length t:

2

0 0

let ( )

( )2

t t

C u au

atK C u du K au du K

Page 6: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Solving a simple model: Average cost per unit time:

To find the value of t that minimizes G(t):

21( )

2 2

at K atG t K

t t

2

*

'( ) 02

2

K aG t

t

Kt

a

Page 7: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

The necessary first example

Maintenance cost on the first year of a power generator was $1200. Replacement cost is $64,000.

2 2

*

(1)1200

2 22400

2 2(64,000)7.3 yr.

2400

at a

a

kt

a

Page 8: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

A more general replacement model

S(u) = salvage value at age u

0 0

1 ( )( ) ( ); and ( ) ( )

t tK S tK C u du S t G t C u du

t t t

0 02 2 2

02 2 2

( ) ( )1 ( ) '( )

Solve: '( )

( )( ) ( ) '( )

0

t t

t

d C u du C u duK S t S t

G tt t dt t t t

C u duK C t S t S t

t t t t t

Page 9: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Still a more general model

02 2 2

0

0

( )( ) ( ) '( )

0

( ) ( ) ( ) '( ) 0

( ) ( ) ( ) '( )

t

t

t

C u duK C t S t S t

t t t t t

K tC t C u du S t tS t

t C t S t K C u du t S t

Page 10: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

A Specific Case

0

0

let ( ) , , 0 and ( ) , , 0

( ) ( ) ( ) '( )

1

bu dt

t

dttbt dt bu

bt dt bt dt

C u ae a b S t ce c d

t C t S t K C u du t S t

d ceate ce K ae du t

dt

aate ce K e tcde

b

Rearranging terms:

11bt dt a

ae t ce dt Kb b

Page 11: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

The necessary second example

Replacement cost of an automobile is $10,000. The car loses 15% of its value each year.

(0)

(1)

(0) 10,000

(1) .85(10,000) 8500 10,000

.85 or ln(0.85) .1625

d

d

d

S ce c

S e

e d

0.1625( ) 10,000 tS t e

Page 12: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

More of the necessary second example

First year maintenance cost was $200 and is increasing at the rate of 40 percent per year.

0

(1)

1

1 200

tbu bt

b

aae du e

b

ae

b

( 1)

( )1.4

( 1)

1.4 or ln(1.4) .3365bt

bb t

C t

C t

aee b

ae

.3365.3365

(200)(.3365)1 200 168.25

.3365 1

ae or a

e

0.3365( ) 168.25 tC t e

Page 13: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Bringing it home…

0.3365 0.1625

11

168.25 2.972 10,000 1 0.1625 500 10,000

bt dt

t t

aae t ce dt K

b b

e t e t

4 9778.426

4.1 9812.65

4.2 9851.775

4.3 9896.092

4.4 9945.903

4.5 10001.52

4.6 10063.27

4.7 10131.48

4.8 10206.51

4.9 10288.73

5 10378.5

Page 14: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Revised maintenance costFirst year maintenance cost was $200 and is increasing at the

rate of 20 percent per year. LetM = rate of increase in maintenance costI0 = first year maintenance cost

D = yearly rate of depreciation as a fractionThenb = ln(1 + M) = ln(1 + .2) = .18232a = I0 b / M = 200 (.18232) / .2 = 182.322

c = K = 10,000d = -ln(1 – D) = -ln(1-.15) = .1625

( ) ; (0)

(1) (1 )

dt

d

S t ce S c K

S Ke D K

( 1)

1

0

0

( )1 ; 1

( 1)

1

btb

b t

b

bt

C t aeM e M

C t ae

a eae dt I

b

Page 15: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Our new solution

8.5 9572.033

8.6 9650.86

8.7 9734.041

8.8 9821.688

8.9 9913.913

9 10010.83

9.1 10112.57

9.2 10219.23

9.3 10330.96

9.4 10447.86

9.5 10570.08

0.18232 0.1625

11

182.322 1/ 0.18232 10,000 1 0.1625 1000 10,000

bt dt

t t

aae t ce dt K

b b

e t e t

Page 16: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Yet another general case

let ( ) ; , 0 and ( ) ; , 0b dC t at a b S t ct c d

Then the average cost per unit time is given by:

0

1

1 ( )( ) ( )

1

1

t db

b d

K S t K a ctG t C u du t

t t t t b t

K at ct

t b

Page 17: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Minimize G(t) Directly

The Die Forge Company operates several die forges die forging pounds or presses metal between two dies (called

tooling) that contain a precut profile of the desired part. Parts from a few ounces to 60,000 lbs. can be made using this process.

Each unit cost $150,000 with C(t) = 200t1.5 and S(t) = 500t-.15

1

0

0.151.5 1.5 1.15

0

1 ( )( )

1

150,000 1 500 150,000 200200 500

2.5

tb b d

t

K S t K aG t au du t ct

t t t t b

tu du t t

t t t t

Page 18: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

The Solution

1.5 1.15150,000 200Min ( ) 500

2.5G t t t

t Using Solver

t* = 17.31128 yr.

G(t)

15 14625.3715.5 14537.92

16 14474.3816.5 14432.87

17 14411.7217.31 14408.18

18 14424.7318.5 14456.38

19 14503.3419.5 14564.66

20 14639.47

Page 19: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Let’s take derivatives…

1.5 1.15

.5 2.152

2.5 0.15

150,000 200Min ( ) 500

2.5200 1.5150,000

'( ) 500 1.15 02.5

150,000 120 575 0

G t t tt

G t t tt

t t

t G'(t)15 -200.206

15.5 -150.32316 -104.456

16.5 -62.134917 -22.9577

17.31128 -0.0002818 47.30427

18.5 78.9479519 108.5795

19.5 136.396820 162.5735

Page 20: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

A MINIMAL REPAIR MODEL

Replacement Based upon random failures

Page 21: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Minimal repair model

• Equipment is restored upon failure• Restoration results in minimal repair • Equipment continues to deteriorate over time• Define (t) = failure rate at time t (an increasing function)• N(t) = number of failures in time t

E N t t dtt

[ ( )] ( ' ) 'z0

Page 22: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Power Law Process (t) = a b tb-1 , a,b > 0

A six year old regional transit bus experiences minimal repairupon failure. It was found to have an intensity function given by

(t) = .5 t1.5 with t measured in years.

The expected number of failures during the first two years is given by

The expected number of failures during the first 5 years is given by55 2.5

1.5

0 0

.5[ (5)] .5 11.18

2.5

tE N t dt

22 2.51.5

0 0

.5[ (2)] .5 1.13

2.5

tE N t dt

Page 23: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Replacement Model

Cu = unit cost,Cf = cost of a failure t = replacement time (decision variable)

0( ) ( )

t

u fC t C C t dt

0( )

tfuCC

C t dtt t

Page 24: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Replacement Model – Power Law process

dC

dt

C

tb C atu

fb

221 0( )

tC

C a bu

f

b

*( )

/

LNMM

OQPP1

1

what if b <= 1?

1 1

0

tf b bu u

f

CC CC abu du C at

t t t

Page 25: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

A Really Good Example

A repairable machine has a NHPP with an intensity functionof (t) = 2 x 10-6 t with t measured in operating hours. If the cost of a failure (repair) is $500 and the unit cost is $21000,

then

Replace at 6,481 hr or 810 days if used 8 hr/day

1/ 1/2

6

21,000* 6481

( 1) 500(10 )

b

u

f

Ct

C a b

Page 26: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

REPAIR VERSUS REPLACE

Decisions…Decisions

Page 27: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Repair vs. Replacement

f = the number of part failures over the life of the system,c = unit cost of the part,ar = fixed cost of repairad = fixed cost of discarding where ad < ar

br = cost to repair a failurebd = cost to remove and replace a part where bd < br ,k = condemnation fraction

A Cost Trade-off Model

repair cost = ar + br f + c k fdiscard cost = ad + (c + bd ) f

Page 28: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Repair vs. Replacement

ad + (c + bd ) f <= ar + br f + c k fIf Then discard

ca a

f k

b b

kr d r d

( )1 1

c

f

discard

repair

br-bd

1-k

Page 29: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Example - circuit board

ar = $ 20,000 (primarily test equipment and facilities) ,ad = $ 1200 (warehouse overhead for the spares),br = $ 768 / failure ($48 / hr labor x 8 hr MTTR x 2 crew members),bd = $ 24 / failure ( $48 / hr labor x .5 hr R&R x 1 crew member),k = .05

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

UNIT COST

NBR FAILURES

DISCARD VS REPAIR

c = 783.2 + 19789.5 / f .

Page 30: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

BLOCK REPLACEMENT

Block replacement for a group of items (pages 736-738)When is it more economical to replace a group of items that will eventually fail at the same time rather than one at a time?

Page 31: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Block Replacement

Let pk = fraction of items that fail in period kn0 = number of items placed in service at time 0

Period Number of failures1 n1 = n0p1

2 n2 = n0p2 + n1p1

3 n3 = n0p3 + n1p2 + n2p1

k nk = n0pk + n1pk-1 + …+ nk-1p1

...

Page 32: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Group Replacement Continues

Let a1 = cost of an individual replacementa2 = cost of replacing all n0 items

number periods for block replacement average cost

1 a2 + a1n1

2 [a2 + a1(n1 + n2)]/2

k

2 11

0 1 1 1 1( ) where ...

k

jj

j j j j

a a n

G k n n p n p n pk

nj is the expected number of failures in period j

Page 33: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

Expected Cost without Block Replacement

1

( ) kk

E T k p

The expected lifetime of a single item:

Therefore the expected (steady-state) cost for the entire block of items: 0 1Cost per time period

( )

n a

E T

Example: 200 items cost $5 each to replace and have anexpected lifetime of 25 months. Then (200)(5)/25 = $40 per month(on the average, there will be 8 failures per month).

Page 34: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

The mandatory example A large sign us lit by 8,000 bulbs. The bulbs cost $2 each to

replace as they fail but can be replaced for 30 cents each when they are replaced all at once. Based upon past history:

months fraction failing1 0.022 0.033 0.034 0.055 0.086 0.097 0.078 0.19 0.11

10 0.1311 0.1512 0.14

1

n0 = 8,000n1 = no p1 = (8,000) (.02) = 160n2 = no p2 + n1 p1 = (8,000) (.03) + (160)(.02) = 243etc.

Use Excel

a1 = 2

a2 = 2400

n0 = 8000

Page 35: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

From Excel…nbr mo.

fraction failing 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 nj Sum nj G(k)

1 0.02 160 160.0 160.0 2720.02 0.03 240 3.2 243.2 403.2 1603.23 0.03 240 4.8 4.9 249.7 652.9 1235.24 0.05 400 4.8 7.3 5.0 417.1 1070.0 1135.05 0.08 640 8 7.3 7.5 8.3 671.1 1741.1 1176.46 0.09 720 12.8 12.2 7.5 12.5 13.4 778.4 2519.5 1239.87 0.07 560 14.4 19.5 12.5 12.5 20.1 15.6 654.6 3174.0 1249.78 0.1 800 11.2 21.9 20.0 20.9 20.1 23.4 13.1 930.5 4104.5 1326.19 0.11 880 16 17.0 22.5 33.4 33.6 23.4 19.6 18.6 1064.0 5168.5 1415.2

10 0.13 1040 17.6 24.3 17.5 37.5 53.7 38.9 19.6 27.9 21.3 1298.4 6466.9 1533.411 0.15 1200 20.8 26.8 25.0 29.2 60.4 62.3 32.7 27.9 31.9 26.0 1542.9 8009.8 1674.512 0.14 1120 24 31.6 27.5 41.7 47.0 70.1 52.4 46.5 31.9 39.0 30.9 1562.4 9572.3 1795.4

sums 1 8000

1

2400 2

( )

k

jj

n

G kk

12

1

2 8,000( ) 8.22 mo. cost per mo. $1,946.47

8.22kk

E T k p

Page 36: Equipment Replacement Four Really Great Models 1. Deterministic Age Replacement 2. Minimal Repair Model 3. Repair versus Replace 4. Block Replacement

This is the End