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Total No. of Pages: 2

Register Number: 6937

Name of the Candidate:

M.B.A. (operations MANAGEMENT, project management, energy management) DEGREE EXAMINATION - 2012

(first YEAR)

(paper – VIII)

180. OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT

December) (Time: 3 Hours

Maximum: 75 Marks

SECTION - A
Answer any FIVE questions. (5 × 3 = 15)

1. / Define ‘Operations Management’.
2. / What are the objectives of MRP?
3. / What do you mean by Production System?
4. / Define ‘Production Control’ and its objectives.
5. / What factors would you consider in capacity planning?
6. / What do you mean by bench marking?
7. / What is lean six sigma?
8. / Narrate the different types of Layout.

SECTION - B
Answer any THREE questions. (3 × 10 = 30)

9. / Explain the need for Production Management.
10. / How do you forecast the demand for operations?
11. / Explain the need for capacity planning.
12. / What are the objectives of Quality Control?
13. / Discuss the characteristics of Production Process System.

SECTION - C
Answer any ONE question. (1 × 15 = 15)

14. / Explain the different dimensions of quality.
15. / Discuss the need for large scale projects.
16. / Narrate the techniques to be used for facility location.

SECTION - D
(Compulsory) (1 × 15 = 15)

17. / CASE STUDY:
Mr. Narang, who runs a Lulla Enterprises, manufacturer of toilet cries. One of the company’s main products is tooth paste. The company manufactures both the tooth paste and also the flexible tubes in which the tooth paste contained. Highly mechanised filling lines are used in the filling of the tubes and the packaging of the product.
The Plastic Caps that fit on the tubs are made in a separate building in lots of 1,00,000 and placed in large cylindrical containers. Typical defects that occur in the caps result from inadequate material being fed into the moulding machinery or damage may occur in tumbling processes used for removing sharp edges for cleaning since the cost of one cap is Re. 1 and cost of inspecting a cap is Rs. 1.20.
When the caps are completed, they are stored in the cylindrical containers. At the filling line, the caps are dumped into a hopper which automatically feeds the caps in the production line.
A persistent problem that has been arising on the filling line is the failure of the plastic caps to fit on the tubes after the tubes are filled. Failure of the cap to fit on the tube properly results in the frequent shattering of the cap or tube and the jamming of the production line. Because of the high speed of the line as many as 30 tubes may be damaged in the process. Since filled tubes cost Rs. 21.50, it has become essential to find a way to control the number of defective caps fed into the production line.
Questions:
1. What quality control plan would you recommend for overcoming this problem?
2. Discuss any inspection procedures that you propose to include in this plan.

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