Stations

Last updated: June 20, 2026

A station is a place where production work happens, an assembly bench, a machine, a finishing area, that a batch order's route passes through. Stations are how a production process is mapped onto your real shop floor, so a build is not just a recipe but a sequence of places and steps.

What you will learn
  • What a station represents
  • How a route sequences work through stations
  • How stations tie to a location

How it behaves

A station is a simple record, a code, name, description, the location it sits in, and an active flag, but its role is structural. A batch order's route chains its steps through stations in order, each with a duration, and stock can be consumed or produced at a step. So a station is a node in the production flow: you model where each stage of a build takes place, and the route walks a batch through them in sequence.

Good practice

  • A station is where work happens; the route is the order it happens in.
  • Tie stations to a location so production maps onto your real premises.
  • Keep stations meaningful – one per real work area, so routes read like the floor.

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