It’s expected that you report the quantity that is actually scrapped. So if you disassemble 9 lb and report 2lb as scrap and then receive the remaining 7lb, the order will close.
If you want a shop order to auto close even though you haven’t received all remaining quantity you can set the close tolerance. the order will then close when all produced parts have been received up to this tolerance.
Thanks Björn for the reply. What you said is correct but I was thinking like there is no place it shows the potential receivable qty or the scrapable qty according to the scrap factor defined in the order (or in the structure). If you have the scrap factor in the material line the required qty get updated irrespective of whether you actually scrap it or not. So I feel this scrap factor in the produced part only helps for the planning if you include it as a supply.
@Sumedha Disassembly components are more comparable with the main product and how the scrap works for that.
@Sumedha Disassembly components are more comparable with the main product and how the scrap works for that.
@Björn Hultgren appreciate if you could describe this further please? I didn’t get what you exactly mean here.
Well if you have a normal manufacturing shop order with lot size 10 and a scrap factor of 20%, the remaining quantity will be 10, but the expected supply the MRP etc., will calculate with from the shop order will be 8. The same concept is present for the disassembly components.
Indeed, this is used for planning. Thanks for the clarification.