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Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR)

Introduction: DBR

Drum-Buffer-Rope (DBR) is a production scheduling and control method developed within the Theory of Constraints (TOC) by Eliyahu M. Goldratt. It synchronises workflow by focusing on the system’s bottleneck, ensuring that the entire process is aligned with its slowest step.

Background

The Theory of Constraints emphasises that every system has at least one limiting factor that determines overall throughput. DBR was created to manage this constraint effectively. By pacing production to the bottleneck and preventing overproduction, DBR reduces waste, improves flow, and enhances delivery reliability.

Key Elements/Features

DBR consists of three core elements:

  • Drum: The constraint that sets the pace, like the beat of a drum. No process can operate faster than this step.
  • Buffer: A small, controlled amount of inventory or time placed before the constraint to protect it from upstream disruptions.
  • Rope: A communication mechanism that regulates material release into the system, ensuring flow matches the drum’s rhythm.

Applications/Examples

DBR is applied in:

  • Manufacturing: Scheduling production lines to prevent bottleneck idle time.
  • Project management: Adapted as Critical Chain Project Management (CCPM).
  • Supply chains: Aligning material release with capacity limits to avoid excess work-in-progress (WIP).

For example, in a factory producing gear components:

  • The drum is the heat-treatment oven (the slowest step).
  • A buffer of pre-processed parts ensures the oven never sits idle.
  • The rope controls raw material release so upstream processes don’t overload the system.

Relevance/Impact

DBR maximises throughput, prevents overproduction, and reduces lead times. It ensures that constraints are always fully utilised, while encouraging a system-wide perspective rather than isolated local optimisation. The result is improved predictability, efficiency, and customer satisfaction.

See also

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