Choosing the Most Economical Machine for Production Two currently owned machines are being considered for the production of a part. The capital investment associated with the machines is about the same and can be ignored for purposes of this example. The important differences between the machines are their production capacities (production rate× available production hours) and their reject rates (percentage of parts produced that cannot be sold). Consider the following table:
Machine B | Machine A | |
130 parts/hour | 100 parts/hour | Production rate |
6 hours/day | 7 hours/day | Hours available for production |
10% | 3% | Percent parts rejected |
The material cost is $6.00 per part, and all defect-free parts produced can be sold for $12 each. (Rejected parts have negligible scrap value.) For either machine, the operator cost is $15.00 per hour and the variable overhead rate for traceable costs is $5.00 per hour.
(a) Assume that the daily demand for this part is large enough that all defect-free parts can be sold. Which machine should be selected?
(b) What would the percent of parts rejected have to be for Machine B to be as profitable as Machine A?