Merlin MRP 2000 User GuideOverView and Quick Start


Getting Started

If you are just using Merlin MRP 2000 for the first time, may we welcome you and say we hope your association with this software is a long and happy one.  Keep an eye on our website at www.merlinsys.co.uk/mrp2000 for product information and updates.

And if you haven't already done so, please start by reading the Basics section by clicking the [Basics] link at the bottom of this page.

If you need to install WorkStations for a network, please see the information in the Manager section under Set Parameters.

Talking of which, there is one small job you should do before you start work, and that is enter your company details and a few basic parameters that tell Merlin how you would like to work.  Again, see the Set Parameters section by clicking the link to [Manager] at the foot of the page.

Merlin MRP 2000 Command Centre - Stores

This is the Merlin MRP 2000 Command Centre, which you will enter when the program first loads.

You will see immediately that all of the work areas are available on individual tabs.
Just click the appropriate tab to see the options available, and click a button to launch an operation or process.

Your Merlin MRP 2000 system works like an engine, cycling around as you process each job, consuming materials and generating finished products.  This cycle is outlined below in the Merlin MRP 2000 Quick Start.  Gain an understanding of the steps listeded and you will be well on the way to mastering the software.

Merlin is very easy to use, and you do not need to be a computer expert to master it, but there is a learning curve associated with the way you use the software strategically to provide the solution to your MRP management.  In other words, you need to use it methodically.  Once you have grasped the steps outlined below, and followed it round for a few cycles, all will fall rapidly into place.

Merlin MRP 2000 Quick Start

In essence, all you need to do to run a production job through Merlin MRP 2000 is to create a top level Job Record Card, run the MRP Process, Issue Materials, then close the job.  This is little more than a matter of mouse clicks!

However, in order to create a job you need a Bill of Materials (BoM) for the assembly.  To create a BoM you need a Stock Record Card for each of the materials used, and to create effective Stock Record Cards you need at least one Supplier Record Card relating to a supplier for each stock record item.

Once you are up and running, most of these things will already exist and simply need maintaining, but to get started you have to create them as you go.  So, the eight steps outlined below will set you on this path, by creating and processing a single production job (with or without in-house subassemblies).  You may very well not want to process your jobs one-by-one, and certainly you don't have to, but this illustration serves as a starting point to introduce you to some of Merlin's armoury of tools as you progress towards the bigger picture.

For more information about any of the items listed, please see the relevant section of this User Guide identified in the square brackets.

  1. Create a Supplier Record Card  for each supplier you need to use to procure materials for your first Merlin job, and another for the customer for this job. [MarketPlace/Business Contacts]

  2. Create a Stock Record Card for each of the materials you need at this point. [Stores/Record Cards]

  3. Define the Assembly and Create a BoM for the product you are about to make, and one for each of any incorporated in-house subassemblies. 
    [Design Office/Assembly Library]

  4. Create a Job Record Card for the top level assembly only for this production run  and click the AUTHORISE button. [Manager/Job Manager]

  5. Run the MRP Process for the job. [Shop Floor/Commander] **

  6. Receive materials into stock (if necessary). [Buying Office/Goods In]

  7. Print Pick List(s) and Issue Materials for any subassembly jobs AutoCreated by the MRP process, and finally for the top-level job you created yourself. [Shop Floor/Commander]

  8. Close the Job(s) as production is completed. [Job Tracker/Job Cards]

** Of course, you don't have to Run MRP job by job, and probably wouldn't want to other than in exceptional cases.  Much more efficient to use Buying Office/Run MRP in a planned manner to launch the MRP Process (buy materials and AutoGenerate Jobs for subassemblies, allocate materials, etc.)  for all of your unprocessed jobs, or, you can link jobs into Job Series, which are buying groups, and then Run MRP in Job Series mode, selecting the series you wish to process at that time.

Merlin QuarterMaster is Merlin's MRP engine, and should be run in one of its modes at the appropriate time to encompass every top-level job.  Please see Buying Office/Run MRP for detailed information.

The eight steps outlined above describe the simple procedures for running your plant with Merlin MRP 2000.  The [Name in Brackets] in each case tells you which tab  and activity to select in Command Centre to perform the action.

Using the links at the bottom of this page, it would be a good idea to browse around each of these sections before you begin.

Actions 1-3 listed above will become a matter of occasional routine maintenance once you have your data set-up in Merlin MRP 2000Thereafter, most jobs will require only actions 4 to 8, and these are achieved substantially with mouse clicks, and making selections from drop-down lists.  

And of course, you probably would  not wish to perform Actions 5 and 6 on a job-by-job basis.  Perhaps you would wish to do your buying on a weekly basis, or group jobs into Job Series so that you can run the MRP process for the group at the logically correct moment.  But these are things to learn about once you have an understanding of the basic cycle and the rich features of the software.

You will find all these features documented in the relevant  sections of this User Guide [indicated in the square brackets above].

Remember, if the BoM you create in Item 3 contains items which are in-house subassemblies, then each of these will need a BoM of its own.  And if any of these contain subassemblies, these too will need BoMs, and so on down the tree.

And that really is about as all there is to is to the basic Merlin Cycle.

Of course, Merlin is a very comprehensive software package, crammed with advanced options.  If you start by learning the procedures itemised above you will be up and running with your Merlin software.  You can then take time to explore the immense power of this software, and this User Guide, to find all of the things that Merlin MRP 2000 can do to make your life easier.


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