Activity-On-Arc(AOA), Activity-On-Node(AON).

Member for

19 years 10 months

Hi Jillian

Welcome to Planning Planet - as you have found this is the forum to learn and share knowledge and experience.

Please remember however that It is not a good idea to liven up a long dead discussion.

BTW whats with the Rabbit Hutch Shop?
 

Best regards

Mike Testro

Member for

14 years 3 months

Thank you for sharing these helpful information. I learned a lot from it. I really appreciate you guys sharing these information with us.

 <SPAM LINK DELETED BY GARY W>

Member for

24 years 2 months

In responce the Brads point about Pertmaster, when I started planning we used Hornet. The Arrow on Arrow drawing was based upon A1 sheets, activity numbers taken from a rows and column numbering. So simple! Especially as my senior planner made me draw every thing out be hand first! And then do a forward / backward pass before putting it into the computer. His idea of making me learn some planning principles and not just software. Stood me in good stead since!



Mal

Member for

18 years 5 months

AOA - Abort Once Around (such a old topic)



Yes, its true that professionals use both the terminology, Arc as well as arrow.



Depends from which school you have passed from?



Cheers,



Rav

Member for

19 years

AOA can represent both Activity on ARROW &Activity on ARC,

as in scheduling we find authors using both the terminologies interchangably.

Member for

22 years 7 months

As Ron rightly mentioned, AOA should stand for Activity on Arrow, from where the term Arc comes to replacing the Arrow?

Member for

21 years 3 months

AON (PDM) is developed to fulfill the shortcomings of AOA method in case of complex project. I guess that’s why most of the softwares support it.

Member for

20 years 7 months

"But in general activities are not very straight forward with FS relation, I guess that is the reason most of the programme supporting AON(PDM) technique there you can define all other type of dependencies."



Any relationship that can be modelled with complex dependencies and lags can also be modelled using only FS relationships, with greater decomposition and milestones. The FS-only network will have more activities and milestones, but it will be easier to focus on task-completion criteria. And computing critical path DRAG is usually easier in FS-only networks.

Member for

20 years 6 months

AOA - Activity On Arrow

Finish to Start (FS) relationship only; Dummy activities allowed



AON - Activity On Node

Also called Precedence Diagram Method.

Represent improvement to PERT and CPM by adding lag relationships to activities.

All the four types of relationships allowed.

Start to Start (SS), Start to Finish(SF), Finish to Start (FS) and Finish to Finish (FF).

Arrow indicate dependancy, No dummy activities.

Member for

20 years 6 months

Most of the programs inculding Primavera and MS Project use AON. AOA lacks different type of relationships which enable the AON user to model a real life dynamic situation to a ’considerable’ extent.



Though one thing I would like to submit that whenever someone is trying to explain a process, he goes by AOA. AON can’t beat the simplicity of AOA.



Reagrds

Rashid Iqbal

Member for

21 years 3 months

AOA (ADM) is used when the relationship among the activities are clearly defind as FS. But in general activities are not very straight forward with FS relation, I guess that is the reason most of the programme supporting AON(PDM) technique there you can define all other type of dependencies.

Member for

22 years 10 months

I always though that ’AOA’ stood for Activity-on-Arrow, as in arrow diagraming. Did I sleep through another class and miss something?

Member for

22 years 11 months

IMHO, AON (or PDM) is easier for schedulers to conceptualize in the head from a list of predecessors/successors. Ie. there are less numbers/codes/labels representing the logic network.



AOA (or ADM) is more explicit when the logic network is graphed, but is more difficult to conceptualize from a list of I,J nodes.



Bernard Ertl

eTaskMaker Project Planning Software