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Artificial Activity Split Problem. Resource Levelling Challenge.

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Alex Lyaschenko
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In previous discussions, we explored the benefits of employing Volume Lag and Point-to-Point dependencies for emulating activities that shift in parallel. However, due to the limited support for these features in many planning tools, some planners have suggested the utilisation of artificial activity splits as an alternative. It enables the application of Finish-to-Start dependencies without introducing lags between parallel activities. While this workaround resolves one issue, it potentially creates others.

Artificial Activity Split may cause two planning problems: 

1. Splitting of activities that must be performed without interruption into separate segments can end in undesired results after resource levelling.

2. If parallel activities have duration uncertainties, Artificial Activity Split makes the result of the Monte Carlo Simulation unreliable.

Let’s review a scheduling fragment with six activities. All dependencies are Finish-to-Start.

Activities A and B have a volume of 80 units (10 units per day). Activity B can run in parallel with Activity A after 40 units are achieved. There are different ways to simulate such a scenario. Ideally, if a planning tool supports ‘volume scheduling’ and ‘point-to-point dependencies’, multiple point-to-point dependencies could be applied:

Start-Start (40v, 0v) and Start-Start (80v, 40v).

If a planning tool only supports duration lags, it could be simulated with two dependencies:
Start-Start + Lag (4d) and Finish-to-Finish + Lag 4 days.

Technically it takes 15 days to deliver the work package.

This fragment requires the same ‘Resource 1’ for Activities A and D for the same days (Day 3-5). So, if there is only one ‘Resource 1’, resource levelling is required.

How levelling is performed if the schedule has Activities with artificial Split? Would such a schedule still be feasible?

Full article with examples:

https://saluteenterprises.com.au/artificial-activity-split-problem-resou...

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david kelly
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Joined: 12 Feb 2016
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Very interesting. I hope I get back to this, I have two clients work on my desk at the moment and more than a little busy. I don't accept the annotation 'artificial' about granulating work to the point of not having 'artificial' relationships from other than the endponts!