20 Principles Of Material Handling and Equipment

20 Principles Of Material Handling and Equipment 

1. Orientation Principle

Study the system relationships thoroughly prior to preliminary planning in order to identify existing methods and problems, physical and economic constraints, and to establish future requirements and goals.
 
2. Planning Principle

Establish a plan to include basic requirements, desirable options, and the consideration of contingencies for all material handling and storage activities.
 
3. Systems Principle

Integrate those handling and storage activities which are economically viable into a coordinated system of operation including receiving, inspection, storage, production, assembly, packaging, warehousing, shipping and transportation.
 
4. Unit Load Principle

Handle product in as large a unit load as practical.


 Principles Of Material Handling 
Principles Of Material Handling 

5. Space Utilization Principle 

Make effective utilization of all cubic space.
 
6. Standardization Principle

Standardize handling methods and equipment wherever possible.
 
7. Ergonomic Principle

Recognize human capabilities and limitations by designing material handling equipment and procedures for effective interaction with the people using the system.
 
8. Energy Principle

Include energy consumption of the material handling systems and material handling procedures when making comparisons or preparing economic justifications.
 
9. Ecology Principle

Minimize adverse effects on the environment when selecting material handling equipment and procedures.
 
10. Mechanization Principle

Mechanize the handling process where feasible to increase efficiency and economy in the handling of materials.
 
11. Flexibility Principle
Use methods and equipment which can perform a variety of tasks under a variety of operating conditions.
 
12. Simplification Principle

Simplify handling by eliminating, reducing, or combining unnecessary movements and/or equipment.
 
13. Gravity Principle

Utilize gravity to move material wherever possible, while respecting limitations concerning safety, product damage and loss.
 
14. Safety Principle

Provide safe material handling equipment and methods which follow existing safety codes and regulations in addition to accrued experience.
 
15. Computerization Principle

Consider computerization in material handling and storage systems, when circumstances warrant, for improved material and information control.
 
16. System Flow Principle

Integrate data flow with the physical material flow in handling and storage.
 
17. Layout Principle

Prepare an operational sequence and equipment layout for all viable system solutions, then select the alternative system which best integrates efficiency and effectiveness.
 
18. Cost Principle

Compare the economic justification of alternate solutions in equipment and methods on the basis of economic effectiveness as measured by expense per unit handled.
 
19. Maintenance Principle

Prepare a plan for preventive maintenance and scheduled repairs on all material handling equipment.
 
20. Obsolescence Principle

Prepare a long range and economically sound policy for replacement of obsolete equipment and methods with special consideration to after-tax life cycle costs.

Sachin Thorat

Sachin is a B-TECH graduate in Mechanical Engineering from a reputed Engineering college. Currently, he is working in the sheet metal industry as a designer. Additionally, he has interested in Product Design, Animation, and Project design. He also likes to write articles related to the mechanical engineering field and tries to motivate other mechanical engineering students by his innovative project ideas, design, models and videos.

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