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mhmoommmh Im - Defense Technical Information …

AD-A172 289 SETS KITS AND OUTFITS (SKO) MANAGEMENT CONCEPTS REVIEN v/1. (PHASE M)U) LOGISTICS STUDIES OFFICE (RM) FORT LEE. VA N N DRISENDINE ET AL. JUL 85 LSO-061. UNCLASSIFIED F/'G5/1 N. mhmoommmh Im ~ . ,,..",- 1I.', ,. '. -- IA i, Alm ION" AYAe S.;t 0S414. 00 HUNIITD. N 90. lit~. 7t~. ~I. ~~'_, V. ' ~~tLA. tw~. tA '"I A N _0 THIS PFkcAo Wh- .. -e ). REPORT rOCIJMENTATION PAGE iL.)' OII IGPR. I I * *4&,I$1 1I. GUV ACCESSION NO. 3 NjECIPIENT-, . ATALJ(- NUMBER. -__. -- ~ I ~ AL - ) i _ __. 4 flT - ..hif- 5 TYPE OF REPORT & PERIOD COVERED. Je tt, Kits, drid Outfitts (SKO) MngletCocts Technical Report Review (Phase 1).

ad-a172 289 sets kits and outfits (sko) management concepts revien v/1 (phase m)u) logistics studies office (rm) fort lee va n n drisendine et al.

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Transcription of mhmoommmh Im - Defense Technical Information …

1 AD-A172 289 SETS KITS AND OUTFITS (SKO) MANAGEMENT CONCEPTS REVIEN v/1. (PHASE M)U) LOGISTICS STUDIES OFFICE (RM) FORT LEE. VA N N DRISENDINE ET AL. JUL 85 LSO-061. UNCLASSIFIED F/'G5/1 N. mhmoommmh Im ~ . ,,..",- 1I.', ,. '. -- IA i, Alm ION" AYAe S.;t 0S414. 00 HUNIITD. N 90. lit~. 7t~. ~I. ~~'_, V. ' ~~tLA. tw~. tA '"I A N _0 THIS PFkcAo Wh- .. -e ). REPORT rOCIJMENTATION PAGE iL.)' OII IGPR. I I * *4&,I$1 1I. GUV ACCESSION NO. 3 NjECIPIENT-, . ATALJ(- NUMBER. -__. -- ~ I ~ AL - ) i _ __. 4 flT - ..hif- 5 TYPE OF REPORT & PERIOD COVERED. Je tt, Kits, drid Outfitts (SKO) MngletCocts Technical Report Review (Phase 1).

2 6. PERFORMING ORG. REPORT NUMBER. _____LSO Project 061. A, j ,O 8. CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMBER(s). *~~~~1 ~i64 I td .h edn fr. Jonil R. [enass 1. 9 i-LfIFOAMltNG UkGANIZATION NAME ANI) ADDRESS 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT, PROJECT, TASK. li Army Materiel Systems Analysis I~L~fUS AREA & WORK UNIT NUMBERS. Activity, AVNN: AMA"Y-LLSO, Fort Lee, VA. 23801 -604 6. 1I1 )NTHULLINU Qt-FICE NAME: ANDJ ADDRESS 12. REPORT DATE. kiBiander, UIS Army Ma tcrlel Cupvwnand, July 1985. AlT"N: AMCSM-PiM, b001 Eisenhower Avenue, 13. NUMBER OF PAGES. Alexandriai, VA _____ 62. 14 MON5IT6)RIN AGi'ENCY NAME & ADORE SS(If different from Controllingd Office) 15.]

3 SECURITY CLASS. (of this report). Unclassi fied ISs. DECL ASSI FICATION/ DOWNGRADING. SCHEDULE. _1lb' DlSfRIBijTION STATEMENT (of this ). *ipi'ved] for- puiblic release-, distribution unlimited. 17 UIST RIeUTION STATEMENT (of the abstract entered In Blocir 20, 1( different from Report). 18 SUPPL EMENTARY NOTE:S. ]he vieWS, Opilhiurm, drnd/or findings contained in this report are those of the 13iithOrs and should not be contstrued as an official Department of the Army * pu~1i~iipolicy, ur decision, unless so designated by other documentation. IS9 K E Y WORDS (Continue on reverse side it necessary and Identify by block nurrber).)

4 *~ ~ 'JupplIy , Main tenanlce!, RequjretliCiet5, SKO. 20 AwsrRACT rCxlu ma reverse side if rrec~eeary &adIdewuifiy by block number). -The inventory of S)KO comprises 32 thoujsand di fferent Army-used items, of which Z') thousadnd are-'.ul~r items which are already adequately managed by secon- dat y, item pi o(edures IeChniCd1 l manuals document the contents of 2,339 items, which ate already didt-quately fiandaed by major itew procedures. In between are 6W ttl$ the contenits of which are documentcd by Supply Catalogs and Component , ind whi(h are? coaimoily cal led "K0 About 500 of these "SKO 1' are ma iFntendnc e-reladtI ther c~oiri type or equ i pient oriented); 14 are (vri DO~~'"'"'~iNO.

5 1A14k 143 6 SIUB~~t&UNCLASSIFIED. Y CL-ASSIFICATION Of THIS PAGE Whewn ODt E--(e,*d). V177777r- -21= - 72r r7'r 77 77T 7 . -7: T, 2 1 29 .1 ..P J -L- w -0 ;. ".',IF. A 1. )N JF THIS PAGE(IW hn Dat EnLtered). ,, ,1,.jut Iurs re neither. This particular subset 01lt e'rIt tJ rum other SKO by use of',Type Codes so that the of SKO should be perennial iltion "Whtfl is a SKO really a SKO?"-can be permanently laid to rest. 4,. 4. %~. H UNCIASSIFED. SEiLUMi v .L AS! FICATIONI OF THiIS PAGE'(*4en F)&r&Ft~re4k! SETS, KITS, AND OUTFITS (SKO. MANAGEMENT CONCEPTS REVIEW (PHASE I). LOGISTICS STUDIES OFFICE. PROJECT NUMBER 061.

6 Technical REPORT. JULY 1985. WILFORD H. BRISENDINE. JOHN R. LENASSI. LO; I(ICS STUDIES OFFICE. LIS ARMi MATERIEL SYSTEMS ANALYSIS ACTIVITY. ",RTr LEE', VIRGINIA 23801-6046. iii This Iai- iett blank intentionally. CONTENTS. Page j. 1(IRO TION .. 1. 2. LtfV[Nt '1U) AND THlE USAGE OF WORDS .. 5. I. ChE ilE1th ATiUN uF .. 9. 4. SbIP PLY CA'PAl(, ;('OM'j1 NENT LIST ITEMS .. 21.. iS1 SCS '.. S .. 23. 6. FINDINGS AND C()NCLUSIONS .. 27. Fijure 1. Population of SKO .. 28. I. kLCOMMENJ)ATIONS .. 31. APPEND 1%'E";. A. AcIrtjnli List .. 33. B. Extract, AR 310-34 .. 35. DISTRIBUTION LIST .. 41. op-111 NTIS CRAMI.))]

7 IDTIC TAB E3. U:-announced 03. Justification By .. D6. btio- I. Codes SDist Avada-idjor $ ca 'Il ".. * *" , .. Thi:; paj [utt blank intentionally. a. S'. [ , . o ..v .. a, .. ,.. , ' ". ". -'o , "- " - .. ' .. " . ' ' ' ' ' - .. ,. - - , .".. , - . " ", '. q am unnnm m l~anl I idm 'n SETS, KITS, AND OUTFITS (SKO). MANAGEMENT CONCEPTS REVIEW (PHASE I). Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION. 1. Background. a. Sets, Kits, and Outfits (SKO) range in size from small, inexpensive collections of minor items to depot overhaul sets, the components of which may exceed 1,000 items. The more complex sts may cost several hundred thousand dollars.]]

8 B. Management and control of the large sets (especially those consisting of hand tools) have historically been trouble- some. (1) For equipment related SKO, authorizations must be created, the proposed components determined, and all items pro- cured or assembled prior to the fielding of the related equipment. (2) Once fielded, the components of tool SKO are subject to being lost. Tool- are easily left on a vehicular frame member after a repair job is completed. They are subject to borrowing for a mechanic's personnel work and may never be returned, or may be returned after an inventory. They may become the target for outright pilferage.

9 Tools can miraculously appear prior to a change-of-accountability inventory, only to disappear just as miraculously after acceptance by a new accountable property officer. c. As far as readiness is conceried, tools are just as essential as repair parts. 2. Problem Statement. a. Some SKO are needed for mission support, while others maintain specific equipment. Often no link is apparent between authorizations for SKO and for the underlying equipment; thus, even though the supported equipment is withdrawn from the inven- tory, the SKO remains. ,b. New SKO are sometimes developed without adequate con- sideration of existing SKO; such a situation can lead to prolif- eration of SKO components.

10 C. The problem is compounded because the boundary is not clearly drawn between those SKO which deserve increased manage- ment attention, those already being intensively managed, and those requiring little management attention. Although the Army Materiel Command is addressing SKO management, the first question which must be answered is, "When is a SKO really a SKO?". DARCOM-Rl 700-12, (2), provides this answer: "S Os that are type-classified as standard in SB' 700-20; published in supply catalogs (SC). (component-list (CL) type); categorized as common- or general-purpose type; used for a specific mission or to perform a maintenance function on more than one end item; fielded for at least 6 months; and are included in Army Tables of Organization and Equipment (TOE) or authorization documents such as Modification Tables of Organization and Equipment (MTOE), Tables of Distribution and Allowances (TDA), Joint Tables of Allowances (JTA), and additive operational projects.


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