Electronics Forum | Wed Oct 13 12:12:04 EDT 1999 | Bill Haynes
Hello Morris, I hope that my superiors don't see your message or they might have me go through all of that to calculate my cost per part mounted. One of the things that has helped me out considerably is an Accounting report that gives me all
Electronics Forum | Fri Feb 06 15:12:51 EST 2009 | ccross
You need to base your costs on your labor and overhead rate as well as how much your other expenses are(selling, admin, etc) and profit you want to make. For example (let's use nice round numbers) if you place 10,000 parts per hour and your labor an
Electronics Forum | Wed Jun 22 16:29:27 EDT 2011 | davef
Here's a start 1. Eliminate nonconforming material 2. Eliminate parts shortages 3. Reduce configuration changes 4. Stop rework, software changes 5. Eliminate assembly errors
Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 28 02:03:10 EDT 2005 | Yngwie
Just to check and see if I'm using the right formula in my "cost per component placement" calculation is correct or not. Any input would be much appreciated. Total cost of the machine : A Depreciates over 5 years Actual/best UPH obtained 11000 cph
Electronics Forum | Wed Mar 29 18:45:49 EST 2000 | Dreamsniper
Anyone wants to share his idea or method of calculating Cost per placement in both high and low volume manufacturing environment? Thanks,
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 30 11:08:56 EST 2000 | Michael Parker
Ceeris International has a Cost of Conversion Benchmarking study that should give you all of the facts you seek. www.ceeris.com
Electronics Forum | Mon Feb 03 10:55:15 EST 2003 | mantis
would the accumlative overall cost of repair not govern the amount of rework that can be performed. so that if aboard costs 5 dollars to repair and sells for 7 then the amount of effort and time cosumed would not warrent the repair in the first place
Electronics Forum | Mon Oct 04 10:26:59 EDT 1999 | Morris
I am working on trying to define a cost per placement measure in our SMT assembly operations. Does anyone know where I might find a published industry average that we may compare to? I�ve heard it stated that an industry average is less than $0.01
Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 28 08:46:54 EDT 2005 | jdengler
Do you run 24 hrs a day 365 days a year? Do you have 100% utilization? If no to either or both questions you need a differant formula.
Electronics Forum | Thu Apr 28 11:08:19 EDT 2005 | pr
I would also say that using 11,000 cph (best time) is an overestimate. Why not take the avg components placed over a 24 hr. period and get your cph from that? just a thought, pr