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Q: Quantitative-2 ( Answered,   0 Comments )
Question  
Subject: Quantitative-2
Category: Business and Money > Economics
Asked by: k9queen-ga
List Price: $15.00
Posted: 03 Dec 2003 21:18 PST
Expires: 02 Jan 2004 21:18 PST
Question ID: 283353
A manufacturer of microcomputers produces 4 models: Portable, Student,
Office, and Network.  The profit per unit on each of these four models
is $500, $350, $700, and $1,000 respectively.  The models require the
labor and materials per unit sown below:

            Portable    Student     Office     Network     Total
===================================================================
Labor            5         5          6          8          4000
(hrs/week)
====================================================================
Chasis           1         1          1          1            400
(unit/week)
====================================================================
Disk Drive        2        1          2           1            300
(unit/week)
====================================================================
Hard Disk        0         0          0            1           20
(unit/week)
====================================================================
Memory Chip      16        8           32          64           2200
(unit/week)
====================================================================
Circuit Boards    1        1            2           4            10000
(unit/week)

Request for Question Clarification by robertskelton-ga on 03 Dec 2003 22:31 PST
Do you have a question that belongs with the above?

Clarification of Question by k9queen-ga on 04 Dec 2003 12:41 PST
Yes, the object is to maximize profit.  The constraints are the labor and material.
Answer  
Subject: Re: Quantitative-2
Answered By: elmarto-ga on 04 Dec 2003 13:47 PST
 
Hi k9queen!
In this problem, we must choose the number of portable, student,
office and network computers that should be built such that the total
profit is maximized. Let's call:

X1 = number of Portable computers built
X2 = number of Student computers built
X3 = number of Office computers built
X4 = number of Network computers built

Given that the profits per unit are the ones you stated in the
question, the function we must maximize is:

500*X1 + 350*X2 + 700*X3 + 1000*X4
(this function represents total profits)

The constraints here are very simple. For example, 1 portable computer
takes up 5 units of labor, 1 student model also takes 5, 1 office
model takes 6 and 1 network model takes 8. There's a total of 4000
labor units available. Therefore, the "labor restriction" would be:

5*X1 + 5*X2 + 6*X3 + 8*X4 <= 4000

Similarly, the other restrictions are:

X1 + X2 + X3 + X4 <= 400
2*X1 + X2 + 2*X3 + X4 <= 300
X4 <= 20
16*X1 + 8*X2 + 32*X3 + 64*X4 <= 2200
X1 + X2 + 2*X3 + 4*X4 <= 10000

So what we have here is a typical Linear Programming problem (notice
that both the function to be maximized and the restrictions are linear
functions of the problem's variables). I entered these values into the
Linear Programming module of QM and got the following results:

X1 = 0
X2 = 275
X3 = 0
X4 = 0

Therefore, the company should produce 275 units of the Student model,
and no units of the other models. Apparently, the memory chips
restriction is very strong and hence this solution. Intuitively, see
for example that the portable model takes twice as much memory but
doesn't generate twice the profit. If the manufacturer wanted to
substitute some student models by portable models, he would have to
give up two student computers for each portable one, but he would
loose $700 (2 x $350) and gain only $500. The same goes for the other
models.


I hope this helps! If you have any doubts regarding my answer, please
don't hesitate to request a clarification before rating it. Otherwise
I await your rating and final comments.

Best wishes!
elmarto
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