Examples of Johnson’s Rule for Scheduling Jobs Through Two ...



MSCI 306M Dr. Abe Feinberg

Examples of Johnson’s Rule for Scheduling Jobs Through Two Work Centers

Johnson’s Rule is:

1. From the list of unscheduled jobs, select the one with the shortest processing time in either work center.

2. If the shortest time is at the first work center, do the job first in the schedule otherwise do the job last in the schedule.

3. Remove the job assigned in Step 2 from the list of unscheduled jobs.

4. Repeat steps 1,2 and 3 filling in the schedule from the front and the back until all jobs have been scheduled.

Example 1

At the end of each month, a research and development team writes status reports for the projects at work. The team leaders, Andrew and Julie, submit them to the R&D director on the first Monday of each month. Unfortunately, they forgot to check their calendar one month until late Friday evening. To their surprise, they discovered that the month ended on Sunday and the reports were due the following Monday morning. As they had not started writing them, they decided to come to work early Saturday morning, so they could finish the reports before Monday morning. They split the work as follows: Andrew writes and edits the reports while Julie collates data and draws all the necessary graphs. Assume that Julie starts her work on a report as soon as Andrew is finished with it and that Andrew works continuously. Times for the reports (in hours) are as follows:

Projects Andrew Julie

A 4 2

B 3 5

C 5 1

D 7 3

E 8 6

What is the order of the tasks using Johnson's rule?

ANSWER B-E-D-A-C

CALCULATIONS

Order of jobs using Johnson's rule:

B -> E -> D -> A -> C

How many hours will it take them to finish all the reports? ANSWER 28

CALCULATIONS

Andrew: B (3), E (11), D (18), A (22), C (27)

Julie: B (8), E (17), D (21), A (24), C (28)

(time in parentheses is cumulative hours to complete)

It will take 28 hours to complete all of the reports

How many hours is Andrew idle? ANSWER 1

CALCULATIONS: Andrew’s idle time: 28 - 27 = 1 hour

How many hours is Julie idle? ANSWER 11

CALCULATIONS: Julie’s idle time: 3 + 3 + 1 + 1 + 3 = 11 hours

Johnson’s Rule is:

1. From the list of unscheduled jobs, select the one with the shortest processing time in either work center.

2. If the shortest time is at the first work center, do the job first in the schedule otherwise do the job last in the schedule.

3. Remove the job assigned in Step 2 from the list of unscheduled jobs.

4. Repeat steps 1,2 and 3 filling in the schedule from the front and the back until all jobs have been scheduled.

Example 2

A company is faced with seven tasks that have to be processed through two work centers. Assume work center I works continuously and that they are using Johnson's rule. Data appear below in hours:

Task Work center I Work center II

A 2.58 3.47

B 1.66 5.84

C 2.71 2.41

D 5.52 1.99

E 3.38 7.62

F 5.22 1.73

G 2.89 1.11

What is the sequence of tasks? ANSWER B-A-E-C-D-F-G

Job order using Johnson's rule:

B -> A -> E -> C -> D -> F -> G

What is the time in hours to complete all the tasks in both work centers? ANSWER 25.83

CALCULATIONS

Work center I: B (1.66); A (4.24); E (7.62);

C (10.33); D (15.85); F (21.07); G (23.96)

Work center II: B (7.50); A (10.97); E (18.59);

C (21.00); D (22.99); F (24.72); G (25.83)

(time in parentheses is cumulative hours to complete)

It will take 25.83 hours to complete all tasks

What is the total idle time in hours for work center I? ANSWER 1.87

CALCULATIONS:

Work center I idle time: 25.83 - 23.96 = 1.87 hours

What is the total idle time in hours for work center II? ANSWER 1.66

CALCULATIONS

Work center II idle time: 1.66 hours (wait for task B)

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Andrew

Julie

Work Center I

Work Center II

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