This article considers an extension of the classic machine-repair problem. The machines, apart from receiving service from a single repairman, now also supply service themselves to queues of products. The extended model can be viewed as a two-layered queueing network, in which the queues of products in the first layer are generally correlated, due to the fact that the machines have to share the repairmans capacity in the second layer. Of particular interest is the dynamic control problem of how the repairman should allocate his/her capacity to the machines at any point in time so that the long-term average (weighted) sum of the queue lengths of the first-layer queues is minimized. Since the optimal policy for the repairman cannot be found a...
Integral inventory control of repairable items in service networks can result in a significant gain ...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair model, also known as the computer-terminal ...
This paper deals with a repair shop with multiple parallel servers, which has to carry out planned o...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair problem. The machines, apart from receiving...
Machine maintenance is modeled in the setting of a single-server queue. Machine deterioration corres...
The challenge of making operational decisions in the face of a varying service capacity has both a h...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair model, where we assume that the machines, a...
This paper considers a single-server queueing system with server breakdowns. When the server fails, ...
The classical “repairman problem” (cf. [Feller, An Introduction to Probability Theory and its Applic...
textabstractWe consider a polling model of two $M/G/1$ queues, served by a single server. The servic...
We consider manufacturing systems of m identical unreliable machines producing one type of product. ...
This paper considers a machine-repair system with more than one repair facility. In this scenario, a...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair model, also known as the computer-terminal ...
Integral inventory control of repairable items in service networks can result in a significant gain ...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair model, also known as the computer-terminal ...
This paper deals with a repair shop with multiple parallel servers, which has to carry out planned o...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair problem. The machines, apart from receiving...
Machine maintenance is modeled in the setting of a single-server queue. Machine deterioration corres...
The challenge of making operational decisions in the face of a varying service capacity has both a h...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair model, where we assume that the machines, a...
This paper considers a single-server queueing system with server breakdowns. When the server fails, ...
The classical “repairman problem” (cf. [Feller, An Introduction to Probability Theory and its Applic...
textabstractWe consider a polling model of two $M/G/1$ queues, served by a single server. The servic...
We consider manufacturing systems of m identical unreliable machines producing one type of product. ...
This paper considers a machine-repair system with more than one repair facility. In this scenario, a...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair model, also known as the computer-terminal ...
Integral inventory control of repairable items in service networks can result in a significant gain ...
We consider an extension of the classical machine-repair model, also known as the computer-terminal ...
This paper deals with a repair shop with multiple parallel servers, which has to carry out planned o...