subject
Business, 07.04.2020 19:07 sahaitong1844

The Goodparts Company produces a component that is subsequently used in the aerospace industry. The component consists of three parts (A, B, and C) that are purchased from outside and cost 35, 30, and 10 cents per piece, respectively. Parts A and B are assembled first on assembly line 1, which produces 185 components per hour. Part C undergoes a drilling operation before being finally assembled with the output from assembly line 1. There are in total six drilling machines, but at present only three of them are operational. Each drilling machine drills part C at a rate of 80 parts per hour. In the final assembly, the output from assembly line 1 is assembled with the drilled part C. The final assembly line produces at a rate of 205 components per hour. At present, components are produced eight hours a day and five days a week. Management believes that if need arises, it can add a second shift of eight hours for the assembly lines. The product is sold at $3 per unit. Assume that the cost of a drilling machine (fixed cost) is $34,000 and the company produces 8,200 units per week. Assume that four drilling machines are used for production. If the company had an option to buy the same part at $2 per unit, what would be the break-even number of units? (Round your answer to the nearest whole number.) Break-even point?

ansver
Answers: 3

Other questions on the subject: Business

image
Business, 22.06.2019 07:00, zayam1626
Imagine you own an established startup with growing profits. you are looking for funding to greatly expand company operations. what method of financing would be best for you?
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 12:10, FARHAN14082000
This exercise illustrates that poor quality can affect schedules and costs. a manufacturing process has 130 customer orders to fill. each order requires one component part that is purchased from a supplier. however, typically, 3% of the components are identified as defective, and the components can be assumed to be independent. (a) if the manufacturer stocks 130 components, what is the probability that the 130 orders can be filled without reordering components? (b) if the manufacturer stocks 132 components, what is the probability that the 130 orders can be filled without reordering components? (c) if the manufacturer stocks 135 components, what is the probability that the 130 orders can be filled without reordering components?
Answers: 3
image
Business, 22.06.2019 22:10, zahraa244
Afirm plans to begin production of a new small appliance. the manager must decide whether to purchase the motors for the appliance from a vendor at $10 each or to produce them in-house. either of two processes could be used for in-house production; process a would have an annual fixed cost of $200,000 and a variable cost of $7 per unit, and process b would have an annual fixed cost of $175,000 and a variable cost of $8 per unit. determine the range of annual volume for which each of the alternatives would be best. (round your first answer to the nearest whole number. include the indifference value itself in this answer.)
Answers: 2
image
Business, 23.06.2019 00:30, Kling1982
Bruno's pizza restaurant makes full payment of $8,300 on an account payable to stella's cheese co. stella's would record this transaction with a
Answers: 3
You know the right answer?
The Goodparts Company produces a component that is subsequently used in the aerospace industry. The...

Questions in other subjects:

Konu
Computers and Technology, 24.10.2019 17:43
Konu
Arts, 24.10.2019 17:43
Konu
Geography, 24.10.2019 17:43