SOLE – SOLE – The International Society The International Society of Logistics of Logistics Introduction to Logistics and Integrated Logistics Support (ILS) Presented to University of St. Thomas by Chapter 6 District 6 Minneapolis – St. Paul April 30, 2003
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SOLE – SOLE – The International Society of The International Society of LogisticsLogistics
Introduction to Logistics
and
Integrated Logistics Support (ILS)
Presented to University of St. Thomasby Chapter 6 District 6 Minneapolis – St. Paul
April 30, 2003
Logistics in HistoryLogistics in History
Historically, Army quartermasters have been charged with:
Scope: Manufacturing vs. After-SaleScope: Manufacturing vs. After-Sale
75 % of U. S. employment is services:
21 % of employment is goods producing:– Construction
– Manufacturing
4 % of employment is extraction:– Agriculture
– Mining
Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States,
1997 for 1990
Emphasis: Emphasis: Products vs. SystemsProducts vs. Systems
17.8 % of Gross Domestic Product is manufacturing (1990):
– Consumables
– Non-repairable products
– Repairable (consumer) products
– Repairable (industrial, complex) products• Mobile (self-propelled) vs. Installed• Custom Engineered vs. standard product
Product Life CycleProduct Life Cycle
• Product life cycle showing net profit highest in mature phases.
Systems StructureSystems Structure
• System (prime contractor)– Subsystem - product (subcontractor level)
• Sub-Subsystem– Component
» Replaceable Assembly / Part
» Application-Operating System / Software
Support Concepts -Support Concepts -
• Product Life Cycle Management
• Life Cycle Cost (LCC)
• Service Engineering (products)
• Integrated Logistics Support (ILS)
• Logistics Engineering (complex systems)
Product & System Product & System Life Cycle ManagementLife Cycle Management
• Pre-Concept
• Concept
• Demonstration and Evaluation
• Full Scale Development
• Production and Operation
• Phase Out
• Development • Introduction
• Growth
• Maturity
• Decline
SystemProduct
Concept - Life Cycle Cost (LCC)Concept - Life Cycle Cost (LCC)
• (1) All costs associated with the system life cycle,
• (2) The total cost of acquisition and ownership over the life cycle,
• (3) Approach to costing that considers all costs, and an
• (4) Approach whereby the value of different concepts can be made by comparison of different LCC estimates and the concept with the minimum LCC is preferred.
Concept - Support ElementsConcept - Support Elements
Support Concepts – Elements (cont’d)Support Concepts – Elements (cont’d)
Integrated Logistics Support (ILS)Integrated Logistics Support (ILS)
“A disciplined, unified and iterative approach to the management and technical activities
necessary to (1) integrate support considerations into system and equipment design; (2) develop
support requirements that are related consistently to readiness objectives, to design, and to each other; (3) acquire the required support; and (4)
provide the required support during the operational phase at minimum cost”.
Logistics EngineeringLogistics Engineering
“Those basic design related functions implemented as necessary to meet the objectives of ILS.”
Initial definition of system support requirements
Development of design input criteria
Evaluation of alternative design configurations
Determination of resource requirements
Ongoing assessment of support infrastructure
Logistics Definition #1Logistics Definition #1
“The process of planning, implementing, and controlling the efficient, effective flow and storage of goods, services, and related information from point of origin to point of consumption for the purpose of conforming to customer requirements”.
The professional organization for individuals who have an interest in logistics management.
Logistics Definition #2Logistics Definition #2
“The art and science of management, engineering, and technical activities concerned with requirements, design, and supplying and maintaining resources to support objectives, plans, and operations.”
Logistics Definition #3Logistics Definition #3
“Logistics is the science of planning and carrying out the movement and maintenance of forces. In its most comprehensive sense, those aspects of military operations which deal with: (a) design and development, acquisition, storage, movement, distribution, maintenance, evacuation, and disposition of materials; (b) movement, evacuation, and hospitalization of personnel; (c) acquisition or construction, maintenance, operation, and disposition of facilities; (d) acquisition or furnishing of services.”
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
AffordabilityAffordability
• Affordability is made up of:– Schedule
• Affects Cost when compressed
– Performance• Affects cost by quality required
– Cost• The driver in affordability
AffordabilityAffordability
• Where are the major costs a product Life Cycle– Design/Development
– Procurement/Manufacture
– Support
– Disposal
AffordabilityAffordability• Costs of Life Cycle
AffordabilityAffordability
• Methods of estimating costs– Life Cycle Cost (LCC)
• Costs to design, manufacture, use and dispose of a product
– Total Ownership Cost• LCC plus costs to recruit, train and support the
product operating personnel
• Design to Cost– Working to the amount of funds available
AffordabilityAffordability
AffordabilityAffordability
• Support Factors Creating Costs– How many products
– Where and how many sites
– How many products at each site
– How is repair accomplished
– How many people are needed to repair
– What training is needed by the maintenance people
– What repair parts are needed and how many
– How fast can failed units be repaired
– Repair/support equipment is needed
AffordabilityAffordability
• How is support designed into the product– Analysis of the design for:
• Maintainability – How fast can it be repaired• Reliability – How long will it work without failing• Availability – Is it available when needed
AffordabilityAffordability
• How is the lowest LCC cost achieved– Tradeoff studies
• Design tradeoff– For ease of repair and cost of repair parts
• Manufacturing tradeoff– For less environmental cost at disposal
• Support tradeoff– Where to repair and at what level (O,I,Depot)
AffordabilityAffordability
Life Cycle Cost
System Effectiveness
• Imbalance between “cost” and “System Effectiveness”
Research & Development
COSTS
Production & Construction
System Operation
Maintenance & Support
Retirement & Disposal
Performance & Effectiveness
Reliability, Maintainability & Supportability
Production & Disposability
System Quality
Other Technical Factors
AffordabilityAffordability
• Extra costs created by lack of support analysis– Peculiar support equipment
– Special Tools
– Test equipment
– Training
– Support of support equipment
AffordabilityAffordability
• Conclusion– Supportability is a main factor in the cost of
owning a product
– The most efficient way to get to the lowest LCC is analysis of the design
Design and SupportabilityDesign and Supportability
The tale of four vehicles
Measures of LogisticsMeasures of Logistics
• Reliability
• Maintainability
• Availability
ReliabilityReliability
• How often a thing breaks. Expressed in failures/unit of measure.
• Examples– 385 failures/million hours of operation
– 68 failures/100,000 miles
– 7 failures/million cycles
MaintainabilityMaintainability
• The ease with which an item is repaired
• Includes time to diagnose the problem, fix the problem and verify the fix
• Usually expressed as mean time to repair
AvailabilityAvailability
• The amount of time a piece of equipment is available for use.
• Availability affected by– Time equipment in for service
– Time equipment in for repair
Availability & Support CostAvailability & Support Cost