Quasi-Tech Corporation produces specially machined parts. The
parts are produced in batches in one continuous manufacturing
process. Each part is custom produced and requires special
engineering design activity (based on customer specifications).
Once the design is completed, the equipment can be set up for batch
production. Once the batch is completed, a sample is taken and
inspected to see if the parts are within the tolerances allowed.
Thus, the manufacturing process has four activities: engineering,
setups, machining, and inspecting. Costs have been assigned to each
activity using direct tracing and resource drivers:
Activity |
Expected Cost |
Activity Driver |
Activity Capacity |
Engineering |
$1,000,000 |
engineering hours |
5,000 hours |
Setups |
$ 900,000 |
setups |
200 setups |
Machining |
$2,000,000 |
machine hours |
25,000 machine hours |
Inspection |
$ 800,000 |
inspection hours |
2,500 inspection hours |
Owens produces two models: Model X and Model Y. The following table shows how the two products consume activity.
|
Model C |
Model D |
Units completed |
300,000 |
200,000 |
Engineering hours |
1,000 |
4,000 |
Setups |
80 |
120 |
Machine hours |
20,000 |
5,000 |
Inspection hours |
1,500 |
1,000 |
What are the global consumption ratios of Model C and D respectively? (round to two decimal places)
(1.67pts)
0.20; 0.80
0.42; 0.58
0.56; 0.44
0.84; 0.16
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