During warehouse mobile device production picking for a released production order, the system throws an “insufficient inventory” error, even though sufficient on-hand inventory has been added for the raw material item on the production BOM line.
In our scenario, production picking is executed via the warehouse mobile device, and the system does not correctly recognize the available inventory, leading to a blockage in the process.
From a business perspective, it is not feasible for the client to configure the production input location as license plate (LP) controlled. The primary requirement is to ensure consumption of the correct batch, not the license plate. Introducing LP control would significantly increase operational complexity, as it adds an extra tracking dimension and requires additional scanning effort.
In our case, a single batch can be distributed across multiple license plates (e.g., up to 50 LPs), which makes LP-based control impractical for production scenarios.
This raises a concern regarding the dependency of the flushing principle “Finish” on LP-controlled locations. It appears that the process may only function correctly when the production input location is LP-controlled; however, this does not align with real-world operational needs and creates inefficiencies for customers who rely on batch-controlled processes instead.
