Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

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Agricultural Agricultural Mechanics Mechanics Fundamentals & Fundamentals & Applications Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM) of Materials (BOM)

Transcript of Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Page 1: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Agricultural Agricultural MechanicsMechanics

Fundamentals & Fundamentals & ApplicationsApplications

Agricultural Agricultural MechanicsMechanics

Fundamentals & Fundamentals & ApplicationsApplications

UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)of Materials (BOM)

Page 2: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Bill of Materials• Define as a list and description of

all the materials to be used in constructing a project.

Page 3: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Components• Bill of materials should include:

– Item or part name– Number of pieces– Type of material– Size of pieces– Description of parts– Total feet– Unit cost– Cost

Page 4: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Tips• Calculate:

- number of pieces - total footage - type of wood, etc. - individual prices - total cost

• Be sure to calculate lumber for the length that is to be purchased—not just the length to be used for the project.

Page 5: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Calculating Board Feet

• For small lumber:BF = Thickness (in) Width (in) Length (in)

144Or: BF = T'' W'' L''

144

• For large lumber:BF = T'' W'' L'

12

Page 6: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Pricing• Rough Lumber from sawmill is sold

by per thousand board feet.• Wood products that are sold in

sheets are sold by the panel or by the square foot.

• Retail stores sell lumber by linear measurements.

Page 7: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Standard Abbreviations“ or in = inch lb = pound‘ or ft = foot d = penny(nails)yd = yard NC= Nat’l coarsemi = mile NF=Nat’l fineea = each NPT=Nat’l pipe@ = atN/A = not applicablept = pint

Page 8: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Standard AbbreviationsLF = linear footBF = board footS1S = surface 1 sideS2S = surface 2 sidesS3S = surface 3 sidesS4S = surface 4 sidesNo. /# = numberin² = square inchft² = square footyd² = square yard

Page 9: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Standard AbbreviationsSquare = 10’ X 10’ or 100 square feetNC = national coarse threadsNF = national fine threadsNPT = national pipe threadsd = penny (nails)lb = poundsCwt = hundredweight (100 lbs)

Page 10: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Lumber• Available in 6’, 8’, 10’, 12’, 14’, 16’,

– Special orders for 18’ & 20’

– Widths• 1x6 2x4• 1x8 2x6• 1x10 2x8• 1x12 2x10

2x12 4x6

Page 11: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Plywood• Interior and Exterior grades

– Available in 4’ x 8’ sheet

– Thickness – ¼”, 3/8”, ½”, 5/8”, ¾” 1”

Page 12: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Structural Steel• Standard Length – 20feet

– Flat iron – thickness – 1/8,3/16,1/4,5/16,3/8,1/2

– Width – ½, ¾,, 1, 1-1/2, 2, 3, 4, 5 inch– Angle iron – thickness – same as flat iron– Width – 1/2x1/2; 3/4x3/4; 1x1; 1-1/2x1-1/2;

2x2; extends to 4x4– Round –Hot Rolled, Cold Rolled or Tool Steel– Size in diameter = ¼, 5/16,3/8,3/4,1 to 3”

Page 13: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Steel Pipe• Standard length = 21 feet• Black & galvanized• Lengths

– ¼, 3/8, ½, ¾, 1 up to 3 inches

Page 14: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Important Terms• Item—a separate object.• Rounded Up—when rounding

numbers, round to the next highest number.

• Tongue and Groove Lumber—lumber with a tonguelike edge sticking out on one side and a groove cut into the other.

Page 15: Agricultural Mechanics Fundamentals & Applications UNIT 19—Figuring a Bill of Materials (BOM)

Terms Cont.• Galvanize—coat a metal with

zinc.• Cadmium—used for rust-resistant

plating of steel products.• Board Foot—an amount of wood

equal to a board 1'' thick, 1' wide, and 1' long.