Reserving the same batch for a sales order-
Today i am going to explain you how to set up a product to allow reservation of inventory against a single
batch of inventory.
Same batch reservation lets you reserve inventory for a sales order line against a single batch of
inventory. For example, a customer who orders wallpaper can request that the whole order be
filled from the same batch or lot, to avoid inconsistencies among the rolls.
To set up a product to use same batch reservation, the following settings must be active in the
item model group, tracking dimension group, and storage dimension group that you assign to the
product:
Item model groups – The item model group must have the Same batch selection and
Consolidate requirement fields selected in the Reservation field group for inventory
policies.
Tracking dimensions groups – The tracking dimension group must have the Coverage plan
by dimension field selected for the batch number.
Storage dimensions groups – The storage dimension group must have the Coverage plan
by dimension field selected for Site and Warehouse.
When you reserve inventory for a product on a sales order line that is set up for same batch
selection, Microsoft Dynamics AX tries to reserve the ordered quantity from a single inventory
batch. Any specific batch attribute requirements are also considered. If the quantity can’t be filled
from a single batch, the Same batch reservation conflict page appears. This page describes the
issues and also the actions that you can take to continue with the reservation. The following
conditions might prevent the batch from being reserved:
The batch disposition code has Block reservation for sales flagged as Blocked.
The batch has expired, based on the expiration date and any applicable customer sellable
days. The item can still be considered for reservation if the item model group for the item is
First Expiry First Out ﴾FEFO﴿ date–controlled, and if the best‐before date is selected as the
pick criterion.
The batch doesn’t have enough shelf‐life days remaining, based on the expiration date and
best‐before date, plus any customer sellable days.
Thank you
Today i am going to explain you how to set up a product to allow reservation of inventory against a single
batch of inventory.
Same batch reservation lets you reserve inventory for a sales order line against a single batch of
inventory. For example, a customer who orders wallpaper can request that the whole order be
filled from the same batch or lot, to avoid inconsistencies among the rolls.
To set up a product to use same batch reservation, the following settings must be active in the
item model group, tracking dimension group, and storage dimension group that you assign to the
product:
Item model groups – The item model group must have the Same batch selection and
Consolidate requirement fields selected in the Reservation field group for inventory
policies.
Tracking dimensions groups – The tracking dimension group must have the Coverage plan
by dimension field selected for the batch number.
Storage dimensions groups – The storage dimension group must have the Coverage plan
by dimension field selected for Site and Warehouse.
When you reserve inventory for a product on a sales order line that is set up for same batch
selection, Microsoft Dynamics AX tries to reserve the ordered quantity from a single inventory
batch. Any specific batch attribute requirements are also considered. If the quantity can’t be filled
from a single batch, the Same batch reservation conflict page appears. This page describes the
issues and also the actions that you can take to continue with the reservation. The following
conditions might prevent the batch from being reserved:
The batch disposition code has Block reservation for sales flagged as Blocked.
The batch has expired, based on the expiration date and any applicable customer sellable
days. The item can still be considered for reservation if the item model group for the item is
First Expiry First Out ﴾FEFO﴿ date–controlled, and if the best‐before date is selected as the
pick criterion.
The batch doesn’t have enough shelf‐life days remaining, based on the expiration date and
best‐before date, plus any customer sellable days.
Thank you
No comments:
Post a Comment