Using Lead Time Shifts
This topic applies to APS.
Lead time for an item accumulates for 24 hours per day, seven days per week. For example, if an item's fixed lead time is 6 days (and variable lead time=0), and an order is placed for it on Monday, the lead time indicates the order's earliest availability at Sunday. But for your business, Saturdays and Sundays may not be valid days for accumulating lead time.
To represent this concept of business days for lead time calculations, define a scheduling shift named PCAL. The system uses this shift when calculating lead time for all items in your database. APS interprets the lead time for an item as "working time" on the lead time shift. For example, for a purchased item, a lead time amount of working time from the item's due date offsets the time the purchase order must be placed at the vendor.
Although the system will use this special shift for lead-time calculations for all types of items (Purchased, Manufactured, or Transferred), this concept applies in most cases only to purchased items. Manufactured and transferred items are usually planned according to their routing/bill of material. See the topic about defining lead time to better understand where the system uses lead-time calculations.
If the Time Fence Rule for the item is set to "Specific," the system uses a 24 hours x 7 days calendar instead of using the PCAL.
Other system processes (such as the Material Availability Report and the MPS Processor) use the default scheduling shift, Minimum Hours in Work Day, and MDAY Start/MDAY End planning parameters to determine valid manufacturing days.
To create the PCAL shift: