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Backflushing is one of two common methods of reporting material and labor usage against a job for a parent part. The other method is Issuing. Different ERP systems have differing specific methods, but the general concept is as follows: In backflushing, the quantity of the parent part produced is blown down through its bill of material structure determining how many subassemblies and raw materials were consumed to produce the part. The required components are then relieved out of inventory and the parent is issued into inventory. Labor likewise is calculated through the routing. It's called backflushing because material and labor are pulled through the system in batch after the fact rather than pushed to the job through issuing. Backflushing typically assumes that the parts were created per the BOM and Routing standards. Exeptions are reported separately. Issuing is used when there is less certainty that the parent was produced according to the standard BOM and routing. It may also be used when high levels of reporting control are desired, such as expensive parts or some lot control environments. These are generalizations. An example of an exception in BPCS would be that material is allocated to a job in SFC according to the BOM and can be edited before the job is closed. The backflush goes against the allocations which behave like a BOM that is local to that job. Best wishes Geo. +--- | This is the BPCS Users Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to BPCS-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to BPCS-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to BPCS-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner: dasmussen@aol.com +---
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