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Recently, a customer asked how required quantity is calculated when using a scrap factor (%). Here's the scenario:

You have two components in the shop order (lot size = 1), but UOM in YK-S-P1 is PCS and in YK-S-P2 it is pcs (decimal allowed, qty calc = 2).

 

The problem customer had, why the required qty is not calculated as: (qty per assembly * scrap factor + qty per assembly)

According to that, for the second part required qty = 1 × 0.1 + 1 = 1.1. He asked why it was 1.1112?

The calculation here is done according to the equation: lot size/ (1-scrap factor)

So, for the first part: 1/ (1-0.1) = 1.1112 but the qty UOM here is PCS(decimals not allowed). Therefore, required qty = 2.

For the second part, the same calculation, since the decimals are allowed, qty required = 1.1112.

What is this equation lot size/ (1-scrap factor) and from where does it come from?

There are 2 ways you can derive this equation:

  1. Using Proportional Inverse Relationship
  2. Using Recursive Loss / Geometric Series (found this thanks to ​@sdhalk)

I have described both methods in the attached document below.

Why the customer’s logic was wrong? (qty per assembly * scrap factor + qty per assembly)

This approach incorrectly adds the scrap loss per total quantity to the per-unit quantity, which does not scale properly with the desired lot size.

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