Queueing models for spares provisioning
Donald Gross,
Henry D. Kahn and
Joseph D. Marsh
Naval Research Logistics Quarterly, 1977, vol. 24, issue 4, 521-536
Abstract:
A population of items which break down at random times and require repair is studied (the classic “machine repair problem with spares”). It is desired to determine the number of repair channels and spares required over a multiyear planning horizon in which population size and component reliability varies, and a service level constraint is imposed. When an item fails, a spare (if available) is immediately dispatched to replace the failed item. The failed item is removed, transported to the repair depot, repaired, and then placed in the spares pool (which is constrained to be empty not more than 10% of the time) unless there is a backlog of requests for spares, in which case it is dispatched immediately. The first model considered treats removal, transportation, and repair as one service operation. The second model is a series queue which allows for the separate treatment of removal, transportation, and repair. Breakdowns are assumed Poisson and repair times exponential.
Date: 1977
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wly:navlog:v:24:y:1977:i:4:p:521-536
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