Syllabus
Course Meeting Times
Lectures: 2 sessions / week, 1.5 hours / session
Course Objectives
- Describe some important issues in the design and operation of manufacturing systems.
- Explain important measures of system performance.
- Show the importance of random, potentially disruptive events.
- Give some intuition about behavior of these systems.
- Explain the importance of capacity, and how it can vary randomly over time.
- Teach enough mathematics (especially probability) to describe manufacturing systems behavior.
- Show how in-process inventory is sometimes a necessary evil - that is, show the benefits as well as costs.
- Present some practical tools for systems design.
- Describe issues in real-time scheduling, and show why deterministic scheduling is often not adequate.
- Present some simple scheduling rules.
Prerequisites
Probability and optimization or permission of the instructor.
Probability (6.041 or 18.05) is the important prerequisite.
Quizzes
Take-home midterm and final.
Project
Optional, to replace half of final.
Grading Policy
| ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
|---|---|
| Homework | 10% |
| Midterm | 30% |
| Final | 60% |
or
| ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
|---|---|
| Homework | 10% |
| Midterm | 30% |
| Final | 30% |
| Project | 30% |
Text
Gershwin, Stanley B. Manufacturing Systems Engineering. Paramus NJ: Prentice Hall, 1993. ISBN: 9780135606087. (Available with the instructor.)


