The ID of the schedule.
Schedule Header - Products (tirpt4103m000)Use this session to distribute the schedule header quantities over multiple products.
Production Schedule The ID of the schedule. Schedule Type The type of repetitive production process scheduled. Allowed values Distribution Line The line ID. Warehousing Order An order for handling goods in the warehouse. A warehouse order can be of the following inventory-transaction types:
Each order has an origin and contains all the information required for warehouse handling. Depending on the item (lot or non-lot) and warehouse (with or without locations), lots and/or locations can be assigned. The order follows a predefined warehousing procedure. Note In Manufacturing a warehousing order is often called a warehouse order. Note Production schedules use Blanket warehousing orders. Item A repetitive item (also called RPT item) is a manufactured item whose production is controlled by schedules. A schedule contains multiple schedule lines that can be viewed, released, reported as complete, and so on, in one session. A repetitive item characteristics:
Anonymous items and to-order items can be repetitive. However, only to-order items that are Standard-to-Order can be used in RPT schedules. You cannot use generic items or Engineer-to-Order items in an RPT schedule. Quantity Ratio Takt The ratio of semifinished items to end items produced in this operation. If you define the operated item as a phantom in the bill of material, LN uses this ratio to convert semifinished item quantities that are reported completed to main item quantities. Transfer Quantity The quantity of finished product that must be transferred to the receiving warehouse from the work cell. Quantity to Deliver The total quantity of the product that is about to be delivered into inventory, including any previous quantities. Unit The unit of measure in which the inventory of an item is recorded, such as piece, kilogram, box of 12, or meter. The inventory unit is also used as the base unit in measure conversions, especially for conversions that concern the order unit and the price unit on a purchase order or a sales order. These conversions always use the inventory unit as the base unit. An inventory unit therefore applies to all item types, also to item types that cannot be kept in stock.
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