subject
Business, 14.10.2020 01:01 Kigarya

A production line engineer, Shane, checks every chip for quality control (QC). His workers find errors approximately every 150 chips. Either the defective chips must be sent back for repair or they must be axed (thrown away). The manager, Rob, has mandated that workers must axe all defective chips. Rob walks over to Shane's line and declares, "Why some lines sink more dollars into a chip that's failed, I don't understand. We only make 25 cents off of each chip anyway! Spending an additional $2.00 per chip will only be more money down the drain. Shane, in our line of work we can't afford to flush money down the toilet." The following afternoon, Rob calls a meeting in his office. Rob informs Shane, that Shane's line is axing too many chips. "One chip every hundred and fifty is unacceptable! This is becoming a substantial cost to the company. I believe that it would be more beneficial to allow defective chips to go out the door." Shane asks, "What about the defective chips? Won't customers complain?" Rob replies, "Yeah, yeah, but that's not your problem, the company has a return department that will replace them as customers complain." Rob further estimates that allowing defective chips on the market will yield a $416,000 profit for the company
Facts:
The line produces 100,000 chips per year.
Every chip is purchased.
Chips cost about $9.00 to produce.
Chip testing costs about $4.00 per chip.
Chip repair (manpower and material) is about $2.00 per chip.
This repair cost includes re-testing.
Profit per chip is $0.25 after testing.
There are fifteen full-time employees working under Shane.
Two part-time employees work under Shane's supervision.
Shane's manager, Rob, has been with the company for about 7 years.
Shane has been working under the same manager for several years and has had relatively good relations with Rob.
Additional information regarding the Shane's line:
The engineer's line consists of the final inspection between the bond wires, which attach the chips to the prongs and spot plates (the prongs that protrude from the final product), just before the chips are encased in molding compound for final packaging. You may assume that all defects are caused by faulty bond wire attachment and not by any problem with the chip itself, because the chips were tested in the preceding phase before the bond wires were attached
Numerical and/or Design Problem(s)
1. What percent of the chips may fail if Xanthum Inc. Orders 15,000 chips from Shane's production line?
2. Do you believe this is an acceptable failure rate? From the perspective of Xanthum? From the perspective of the manufacturer? Why or why not?
3. If Shane's line produces 100,000 chips per year, how much will it cost to: 1. Test and repair each defective chip? 2.Test all chips and throw away the defective chips? 3. Not to test any chips and to replace customers chips as needed?
4. Is Rob's estimate reasonable? What about his assertion that it is cheaper to axe the chips?

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Business

question
Business, 22.06.2019 00:30
How did lani lazzari show her investors she was a good investment? (site 1)
Answers: 3
question
Business, 22.06.2019 09:50
Is exploiting a distinctive competence or improving efficiency for competitive advantage. (a) cooptation (b) coalition (c) competitive intelligence (d) competitive aggression (e) smoothing
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 13:30
Hundreds of a bank's customers have called the customer service call center to complain that they are receiving text messages on their phone telling them to access a website and enter personal information to resolve an issue with their account. what action should the bank take?
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 19:50
Aproduction line has three machines a, b, and c, with reliabilities of .96, .86, and .85, respectively. the machines are arranged so that if one breaks down, the others must shut down. engineers are weighing two alternative designs for increasing the line’s reliability. plan 1 involves adding an identical backup line, and plan 2 involves providing a backup for each machine. in either case, three machines (a, b, and c) would be used with reliabilities equal to the original three. a. compute overall system reliability under plan 1. (round your intermediate calculations and final answer to 4 decimal places.) reliability b. compute overall system reliability under plan 2. (round your intermediate calculations and final answer to 4 decimal places.) reliability c. which plan will provide the higher reliability? plan2plan1
Answers: 3
You know the right answer?
A production line engineer, Shane, checks every chip for quality control (QC). His workers find erro...
Questions
question
Chemistry, 18.03.2021 19:50
question
Mathematics, 18.03.2021 19:50
question
English, 18.03.2021 19:50
question
Mathematics, 18.03.2021 19:50
question
Social Studies, 18.03.2021 19:50
question
Mathematics, 18.03.2021 19:50
Questions on the website: 13722363