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The queue time is defined on the work center card in Dynamics NAV and is entered in the unit of measure you specify in the queue time unit of measure code. The same fields are obviously on the routing attached to the item as well and this is typically where you set things up (instead of modifying times on individual production orders). I am using a production order routing for 10 units and changing the different times to see the effect on the operations (I think this is the best way to simulate how the different times affects the routing). The queue time, wait time and move time is sometimes referred to as the interoperation time of an operation and those do not add any costs to the production, they are purely for scheduling purpose.īelow is a description of each of the times and some notes worth knowing. The setup time and run time makes up the execution time of a production order and is the time that could affect the cost of the production. The below illustrates the different times and how they together makes up the total lead time on a production order in Dynamics NAV. In addition to the production lead time is the safety lead time defined on the item or stockkeeping unit card of the product being produced this adds a slack time between the scheduled ending time for the last operation and the due date of the production order. The production lead time if you are using routings in Microsoft Dynamics NAV is the sum of the lead times for the operations that each can have 5 different time components queue time, setup time, run time, wait time and move time.