Schedule Impact Analysis

Member for

17 years 8 months

Dear Mike,

 

1. Thank you very much for your prompt response and i appreciate it. Well, as the matter of fact, the schdule model shall base on the events that occured during the phase of construction and etc. This i have no problem to do with my available data.

2." We have to create order from chaos." This i totally agree to put it in one spread sheet. Fine.

3.  From line number 6 to 11 (paragraph) I don't really understand. I hope you don't mind to advice me further.

Going forward, I have already the daily manhours in hand so what i will do is from the approved schedule, i am identifying Act ID & Synchronized it with the affected daily manhours. Next, slot in the columns "what happened, what is the cause & who is responsible. This will be done in Microsoft Excel format as a summary. 

The issue that i have now, I do not have the supporting document to support my paper (the facts) example daily report signed off by client. I know very well, if i provide this to my management they will ask me, "how do you know that there is downtime during that day, how do you prove it?"

Thank you & regards.

 

Member for

19 years 10 months

Hi Jeffery

Welcome to the Delay Analysis society of crack heads.

What you are experiencing is normal and we have to create order from chaos.

The way that I proceed is to set all available data into one spreadsheet with a field for the affected baseline Act ID.

Weather data should be set into the calendar together with other non productive time that is project global.

Any non productive time that is trade specific needs its own calendar.

None of this will work unless your baseline is responsive.

If you have any of the following then rectify it or forget it:

Constraints

FF or SS links

Lead lags except for curing or drying out periods

Open end logic

Best regards

Mike T.