June 9, 1995 FOREWORD This Manual is issued under the authority of DoD Directive 4140.1, "Materiel Management Policy," January 4, 1993. It provides the standard specifications for the Secondary Item Stratifications to ensure the uniform portrayal of materiel requirements and assets of individual secondary items at the wholesale and retail levels among all DoD Components. It also is a detailed reference Manual on the development of each startification matrix, which must be provided to the Office of the Secretary of Defense twice annually by weapon system, budget category, and Inventory Control Point. This Manual applies to the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD), the Military Departments, the Chairman on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Inspector General of the Department of Defense (IG, DoD); the Defense Agencies, and the DoD Field Activities (hereafter referred to collectively as "the DoD Components"). This Manual is effective immediately; it is mandatory for use by all the DoD Components. Send recommended changes to this Manual to: The Assistant Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Materiel and Distribution Management Policy 3500 Defense, Pentagon Washington, DC 20301-3500 The DoD Components may obtain copies of this Manual through their own publications channels. Approved for public release, distribution unlimited. Authorized registered users may obtain copies of this Manual from the Defense Technical Information Center, Cameron Station, Alexandria, VA 22304-6145. Other Federal Agencies and the public may obtain copies from the U.S. Department of Commerce, National Technical Information Service, 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161. James R. Klugh Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (Logistics) TABLE OF CONTENTS Page FOREWORD2 TABLE OF CONTENTS3 TABLES4 REFERENCES5 DEFINITIONS6 CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION19 C1.1. GENERAL19 C1.2. PURPOSE20 C1.3. THE PROCESS20 C1.4. STRATIFICATION PRODUCT INFORMATION22 C1.5. REQUIREMENTS26 C1.6. ASSETS32 CHAPTER 2 - MATRIX I - PROCUREMENT PROGRAM36 C2.1. INTRODUCTION36 C2.2. REPORT HEADINGS37 C2.3. COLUMNAR ENTRIES38 C2.4. LINE ITEM ENTRIES40 C2.5. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR LINE AND/OR COLUMN CELLS48 C2.6. MATRIX I EXAMPLES51 CHAPTER 3 - MATRIX II - REPAIR PROGRAM60 C3.1. INTRODUCTION60 C3.2. REPORT HEADINGS61 C3.3. COLUMNAR ENTRIES62 C3.4. LINE ENTRIES63 C3.5. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR LINE AND/OR COLUMN CELLS67 C3.6. MATRIX II EXAMPLES68 CHAPTER 4 - MATRIX III - READINESS STATUS73 C4.1. INTRODUCTION73 C4.2. REPORT HEADING73 C4.3. COLUMNAR ENTRIES74 C4.4. LINE ENTRIES75 C4.5. MATRIX III EXAMPLE78 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page CHAPTER 5 - MATRIX IV - APPROVED ACQUISITION OBJECTIVE AND RETENTION 79 C5.1. INTRODUCTION79 C5.2. REPORT HEADING79 C5.3. COLUMNAR ENTRIES80 C5.4. LINE ENTRIES81 C5.5. MATRIX IV EXAMPLE84 CHAPTER 6 - MATRIX V - LOCAL SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION (LSIS)86 C6.1. INTRODUCTION86 C6.2. REPORT HEADING87 C6.3. COLUMNAR ENTRIES87 C6.4. LINE ENTRIES88 C6.5 SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR LINE COLUMN CELLS92 C6.6 MATRIX V EXAMPLES93 CHAPTER 7 - MATRIX VI - TRANSITION FROM STRATIFICATION TO BUDGET 96 C7.1. INTRODUCTION96 C7.2. COLUMNAR ENTRIES96 C7.3. LINE ENTRIES101 C7.4. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR BUDGET ESTIMATE AND PRESIDENT'S BUDGET SUBMISSIONS112 C7.5. MATRIX VI EXAMPLES115 TABLES Table Title Page C1.T1.Summary of Matrices Required by OSD 23 C1.T2.Cutoff Dates and Months of Simulation 24 C1.T3.Asset Condition Code Assignment 34 REFERENCES (a) DoD Directive 3110.6, "War Reserve Materiel Policy," April 25, 1994 (b) Defense Planning Guidance (c) DoD 4140.1-R, "DoD Materiel Management Regulation," January 1993 (d) DoD Directive 4140.1, "Materiel Management Policy," January 4, 1993 DL1. DEFINITIONS DL1.1.1. Acquisition Lead Time (AQLT). The sum of the Administrative Lead Time (ALT) and Production Lead Time (PLT). DL1.1.2. Active Inventory. Materiel that is expected to be consumed within the budget year (2 years) and materiel that has been purchasedto meet specific war reserve requirements. DL1.1.3. Administrative Lead time (ALT). The time interval between identification of a need to buy and the letting of a contract or the placing of an order. DL1.1.4. Approved Acquisition Objective. The quantity of an item authorized for peacetime and wartime requirements to equip and sustain U.S. and Allied Forces in accordance with current DoD policies and plans. This quantity shall be sufficient to support other U.S. Government Agencies, as appropriate. DL1.1.5. Assembly. An item forming a portion of a piece of equipment that can be provisioned and replaced as an entity and incorporates replaceable parts or groups of parts. DL1.1.6. Average Customer Wait Time. The mean average time, in days, required to satisfy customer demands, whether or not the demand was for a stocked or a non-stocked item, or the demand was satisfied from stock on-hand at the supply activity or other sources. DL1.1.7. Component (lower case). An assembly or any combinations of parts, subassemblies, or assemblies mounted together in manufacture, assembly, maintenance, or rebuild. DL1.1.8. Consumable Item of Supply. An item of supply (except explosive ordnance, major end items of equipment, and reparables) that is normally expended or used up beyond recovery in the use for which it is designed or intended. DL1.1.9. Consumer Level of Supply. An inventory, regardless of funding source, usually of limited range and depth, held only by the final element in an established supply distribution system for the sole purpose of internal consumption. DL1.1.10. Consumer-Level Stock. The lowest Retail Level of Supply. (See definition of "Retail-Level Supply.") DL1.1.11. Contingency Retention Stock. That portion of the quantity of an item greater than the AAO and economic retention stock for which there is no predictable demand or quantifiable requirement, and that normally would be allocated as Potential Reutilization Stock, except for a deterination that the quantity will be retained for specific contingencies. DL1.1.12. Customer Demand Pattern. An historical profile of the demands for an item arrayed within timeframes in terms of the geographic locations of the requiring activities and the quantitative volumes required. DL1.1.13. Demand. An indication of a requirement (requisition, request, issue, reparable generation, etc.) for issue of serviceable materiel. Demands are categorized as either recurring or nonrecurring. DL1.1.14. Demand-Based Items. Items that are stocked based on forecasted usage. Demand-based items are stocked based on economics or on military mission essentiality for limited demand items. DL1.1.14.1. Economic-Based. Demand-based items are stocked based on economics when the cost of being out of stock is equal to or exceeds the cost of holding stock and shall be stocked at the wholesale level. DL1.1.14.2. Limited Demand. An item for which usage is anticipated but the item does not meet the established economic stockage criteria. Although limited-demand items fail the economic criteria for demand-based stockage because the probability of demand is low, they qualify as an MME code I, II, or III because the lack of a replacement item would seriously hamper the operational readiness of a weapon system. DL1.1.15. Demand-Development Period. The period of time extending from the date of preliminary operational capability to a point in time when spare and repair parts requirements can be forecast based on actual demands using statistically valid methods. DL1.1.16. Demand-Supported Item. Applied to a specific location or retail inventory (either intermediate or consumer), a demand-supported item is one for which the decision to stock, not to stock, or to continue stockage is based upon actual demands, previously recorded at or transferred to that particular activity or location. DL1.1.17. Economic Order Quantiy (EOQ). The quantity derived from a mathematical techique used to determine the optimum (lowest) total variable costs to order and hold inventory. DL1.1.18. Economic Repair Quantity (ERQ). The quantity derived from a mathematical technique used to determine the optimum (lowest) total variable costs to repair and hold inventory. DL1.1.19. Economic Retention Stock. That portion of the quantity of an item greater than the AAO determined to be more economical to retain for future peacetime issues than to dispose and satisfy projected future requirements through new procurement and/or repair. To warrant economic retention, an item must have a reasonably predictable demand rate. DL1.1.20. End Item. A final combination of end products, component parts, or materials ready for its intended use (e.g., a ship, tank, mobile machine shop, or aircraft). DL1.1.21. End Use Secondary Item Materiel. Materiel in use or to be consumed that is no longer under the custody or on the records of the Supply System or a supply organization; materiel that has been issued to the ultimate consumer for use and/or consumption and is not intended for further redistribution. These are expensed assets for financial accounting purposes and are not considered Supply System stock or inventory for any purpose and will not be reported as such. DL1.1.22. End-User. That individual or organizational element authorized to use supply items. This is normally the terminal point in the logistics system at which action is initiated to obtain materiel required for the accomplishment of an assigned mission or task. DL1.1.23. Essential Item. A support item or a repair part whose absence renders the supported system or end item inoperable. DL1.1.24. Excess. Materiel that has completed reutilization screening within the Department of Defense (DoD) and is not required for the needs and the discharge of responsibilities of any activity. DL1.1.25. In-Process Assets. Assets on order from DoD vendors and not yet shipped, assets in repair at depot-level organic or commercial repair facilities, and assets in repair at intermediate repair facilities. DL1.1.26. In-Storage Assets. Assets in storage at retail consumer-level sites at retail intermediate storage sites, at disposal activities, or in wholesale inventories. DL1.1.27. In-Transit Assets. Assets defined as "in transit" represent materiel that is between storage locations, either wholesale or retail; materiel shipped from vendors after acceptance by the Government, but not yet received by the inventory manager; materiel temporarily in-use or on loan with contractors or schools; or materiel that cannot be otherwise categorized. In transit assets are not included in the records of wholesale inventory used in the stratification process. DL1.1.28. Inactive Inventory. Materiel that is not expected to be consumed within the budget period, but is likely to be used in future years. DL1.1.29. Initial Supply Support. Providing the range and quantity of spare and repair parts for a period of service before replenishment supply support; synonymous with provisioning of initial spare and repair parts. DL1.1.30. Insurance Item. A non-demand-based, stocked, essential item for which no failure is predicted through normal usage. However, if a failure were to be experienced, or a loss should occur through accident, abnormal equipment or system failure, or other unexpected occurrence, lack of replacement item would seriously hamper the operational capability of a weapon system. DL1.1.31. Integrated Materiel Manager (IMM). Any DoD Activity or Agency that has been assigned wholesale integrated materiel management responsibility for the Department of Defense and participating Federal Agencies. Integrated materiel management responsibilities include: cataloging, requirements determination, procurement, distribution, overhaul, repair and disposal of materiel. The terms Integrated Materiel Manager (IMM), Inventory Control Point (ICP), and Materiel Manager are synonymous. DL1.1.32. Intermediate Supply. Intermediate supply refers to any level of inventory between the consumer and wholesale level of inventory and is considered a retail level. The terms "intermediate supply," "intermediate level of inventory," and "retail intermediate echelon" are synonymous. DL1.1.33. Life-of-Type Buy. A one-time procurement, when all cost-effective and prudent alternatives have been exhausted, for the total future requirement of an item that is no longer expected to be produced. The procurement quantity shall be based upon demand or engineering estimates of mortality sufficient to support the applicable equipment until phased out. DL1.1.34. Limited Demand Item. A demand-based item for which usage is anticipated but the item does not meet the established economic stockage criteria, or an item for which the computed demand-based quantity is less than the authorized stockage level. Although limited demand items fail the economic criteria for demand-based stockage because the probability of demand is low, they qualify as an MME code I, II, or III because the lack of a replacement item would seriously hamper the operational readiness of a weapon system. DL1.1.35. Maintenance Replacement. The replacement of an unserviceable reparable item by a serviceable item. Unserviceable items, in this context, include items that are replaced due to malfunction or have reached the end of an administratively determined removal intervrval for preventive maintenance or safety considerations. DL1.1.36. Materiel Obligation. A "materiel obligation" is that unfilled portion of a requisition (for a stocked or non-stocked item) that is not immediately available for issue but is recorded as a commitment for future issue. DL1.1.37. Military Mission Essentiality (MME). This code indicates the composite effect of an item on the overall military mission based on the most critical significant application of the item. This code shall be used in determining resource allocations, determining degree of management intensity, and communicating essentiality among DoD Components. There are four levels of MME: DL1.1.37.1. Code I. Most essential to military mission. DL1.1.37.2. Code II. Highly essential to military mission. DL1.1.37.3. Code III. Less essential to military mission. DL1.1.37.4. Code I. Not essential to military mission. DL1.1.38. Minimum Replacement Unit (MRU). The minimum quantity of an item normally replaced during a maintenance action, often the quantity of a component used per end item. DL1.1.39. Model. A mathematical representation of an operation or management system capable of manipulation to achieve optimum solutions to stated problems. DL1.1.40. Multi-Echelon Readiness-Based Sparing Models. Mathematical models capable of computing the optimal range and depth of spare and repair parts at both wholesale and retail levels to achieve a weapon system readiness goal for the least cost or to maximize readiness for a fixed cost. DL1.1.41. National Item Identification Number (NIIN). A series of nine numerals within the NSN that differentiates each individual supply item from all other supply items. The first two digits signify the National Codification Bureau, which assigned the NIIN, while the last seven digits are sequentially assigned by the Federal Logistics Information System. DL1.1.42. National Stock Number (NSN). A thirteen-position number used to identify items of supply. It consists of a four-position Federal Supply Class and a nine-position NIIN. DL1.1.43. Non-Demand-Based. An item that has no forecasted demands, but qualifies for stockage based on other criteria. The two types of non-demand-based items are insurance items and program based: DL1.1.43.1. Insurance Item. An item for which there is no forecasted usage, but which qualifies as both a source code PB (an item procured and stocked for insurance purposes because essentiality dictates that a minimum quantity shall be available in the supply system) and a MME code I, II, or III (for which no failure is predicted through normal usage); but if a failure is experienced or a loss occurs through accident, abnormal equipment or system failure, or other unexpected occurrences, lack of a replacement will seriously hamper the operational readiness of a weapon system. DL1.1.43.2. Program-Based. Inventory maintained to fill a specified approved program requirement. There are two types of program requirements, as follows: DL1.1.43.2.1. Life-of-Type. Items that are procured on a one-time basis, when all cost-effective and prudent alternatives have been exhausted, for the total future requirement of an item that is no longer expected to be produced. The procurement quantity shall be based on demand or on engineering estimates of mortality sufficient to support the applicable equipment until phased out. DL1.1.43.2.2. Planned Program Stocks. Quantities of an item needed over and above recurring requirements to meet approved programs of a nonrecurring or a sporadic nature (e.g., set assembly and non-repetitive overhaul programs) for which requirements may not be predicted by normal forecasting methods. DL1.1.44. Nonrecurring Demand. A request by an authorized requisitioner to satisfy a materiel requirement known to be a one-time occurrence. This materiel is required to provide initial stockage allowances, to meet planned program requirements, or to satisfy a one-time maintenance requirement. Demands identified by customers as nonrecurring shall be included in wholesale supply forecasts to the extent that an ICP can demonstrate that a particular quantity of nonrecurring demands will improve demand forecasts. DL1.1.45. Not Mission Capable Supply (NMCS). A materiel condition indicating that systems and equipment are not capable of performing any of their assigned missions because of maintenance work stoppage due to a supply shortage. DL1.1.46. Not Stocked (NS). An item for which there is no established RO. Inventory or usage data may be present; however, stock replenishment would not be initiated. DL1.1.47. Numeric Retention Stock. Formerly the quantity of an item greater than all identified requirement objectives, but for which disposal is currently infeasible or uneconomical or for which a management decision has been made to retain stock in the supply system. This category of stock is no longer valid. DL1.1.48. Operating Level (OL) of Supplies. The quantity of materiel required to sustain operations in the interval between replenishment shipments. The term "operating stocks" is synonymous with operating level of supplies. DL1.1.49. Order and Shipping Time (OST) Level. The quantities of materiel required to sustain operations during the interval between the time that an activity processes a replenishment requisition and the time the activity receives the requisitioned materiel. DL1.1.50. Potential Reutilization/Disposal Materiel. Component materiel identified by an item manager for possible disposal, but with potential for reutilization; or materiel that has the potential for being sent by an item manager to the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Service for possible reutilization by another Component or by a Federal, State, or local governmental agency, or for disposal through sale to the public. DL1.1.51. Principal Items. End items and replacement assemblies of such importance that management techniques require centralized individual item management throughout the supply system to include items stocked at depot level, base level, and using unit level. Specifically, these include items of which, in the judgment of the Military Services, there is a need for central inventory control, including centralized computation of requirements, central direction of distribution, and central knowledge and control of all assets owned by the Military Services. Principal items normally will be selected on the basis of their essentiality for combat or training, high monetary value, difficulty of procurement or production, or criticality of basic materials or components. DL1.1.52. Production Lead Time (PLT). The time interval between the letting of a contract or the placing of an order, and receipt into the supply system of materiel purchased. DL1.1.53. Program Objective Memorandum (POM). The POM documents a 6-year projected blueprint of each organization's proposals for updating defense programs. It is submitted to the Secretary of Defense by each Military Department, Defense Agency and Special Operations Command for approval. The approved POM defines the programs to be supported in the Military Department and Defense Agency budgets. DL1.1.54. Provisioning. The management process of determining and acquiring the range and quantity of support items necessary to operate and maintain an end item of materiel for an initial period of service. DL1.1.55. Readiness. A measure or measures of the ability of a system to undertake and sustain a specified set of missions at planned peacetime and wartime utilization rates. Measures take account of the effects of system design (reliability and maintainability), the characteristics of the support system, and the quantity and location of support resources. Examples of system readiness measures are combat sortie rate, fully mission capable rate, and operational availability. DL1.1.56 Readiness-Based Sparing (RBS). The establishment of an optimum range and quantity of spares and repair parts at all stockage and user locations in order to meet approved, quantifiable, weapon system readiness, operational availability, or fully mission-capable objectives. DL1.1.57. Reason for Stockage Category (RSC). The categorization of an item that indicates the reason or basis for stockage at the retail level of inventory. These categories reflect the stockage computation or decision rule applicable, and in some cases are used for inventory stratification and supply management purposes. The demand-supported grouping includes only items that meet the criteria for stockage on a "stocked demand" basis, whereas the non-demand-supported grouping includes items stocked in the following RSCS: stocked insurance, stocked numeric, stocked prepositioned war reserve materiel stock, not stocked, and other. DL1.1.58. Recurring Demand. A request by an authorized requisitioner to satisfy a materiel requirement for consumption or stock replenishment that is anticipated to recur periodically. Demands for which the probability of future occurrence is unknown will be considered recurring. Recurring demands will be considered by the supporting supply system in order to procure, store, and distribute materiel to meet similar demands in the future. DL1.1.59. Reorder Point (ROP). That point at which a stock replenishment requisition would be submitted to maintain the predetermined or calculated stockage objective. The sum of the safety level of supply, the level for ordering and shipping time, repair cycle level, and authorized additive levels equals the reorder point. DL1.1.60. Repair Cycle Level. The quantity of reparable items required to sustain operations during the repair cycle that commences when a maintenance replacement takes place and ends when the unserviceable asset is returned to stock in a serviceable condition. This includes such stages as removed, awaiting shipment, in transit, in pre-repair screening, in process of repair, and being returned to serviceable stock. Any extraordinary awaiting-parts delays and any intentional extended-transit, storage, or repair-process delays should be excluded from the repair cycle. DL1.1.61. Reparable Item. An item of supply subject to economical repair and for which the repair (at either depot or field level) is considered in satisfying computed requirements at any inventory level. DL1.1.61.1. Depot-Level Reparable Item. A reparable item of supply that is designated for repair at depot level or that is designated for repair below the depot level, but if repair cannot be accomplished at that level, will have its unserviceable carcasses either forwarded to the depot for repair or condemnation, or reported to the ICP for disposition. DL1.1.61.2. Field-Level Reparable Item. A reparable item of supply that is normally repaired below the depot level of maintenance and for which condemnation authority can be exercised below the depot level of maintenance. DL1.1.62. Replenishment. Actions to resupply or increase stockage of reparable or consumable parts in support of fielded items. DL1.1.63. Requirements Computation. Any mathematical calculation performed to support requirements determination functions. DL1.1.64. Requisitioning Objective.. The maximum quantity of materiel to be maintained on hand and on order to sustain current operations and core war reserves. It will consist of the sum of stocks represented by the operating level, safety level, repair cycle and the order and shipping time. DL1.1.65. Resupply Time. The mean time between the date a retail activity submits a requisition to the wholesale system and the receipt of the requisitioned materiel. DL1.1.66. Retail Inventory Manager. Any inventory manager of either a consumer or intermediate level of inventory. DL1.1.67. Retail-Level Supply. Those secondary items stored within DoD intermediate and consumer levels of supply. These include supply levels down to the following: Army -- to Authorized Stockage List (ASL) and installation; Navy -- to resupply ships, intermediate maintenance afloat units and shore installations; Air Force -- to base supply; Marines -- to Marine Expeditionary Force (MEF) and base supply. Retail-level assets do not include End Use Secondary Item Materiel. DL1.1.68. Retail Stock. Stock held in the custody or on the records of a supply organization below the wholesale level. DL1.1.69. Retention Limit. The maximum quantity of on-hand materiel that may be retained in stock, as determined by applicable retention rules. DL1.1.70. Safety Level. The quantity of materiel required to be on hand to permit continued operation in the event of a minor interruption of normal replenishment or a fluctuation in demand. DL1.1.71. Secondary Items. Consumable and reparable items other than principal items. DL1.1.72. Stockage Objective. The maximum authorized quantity of materiel to be on hand to sustain current operations. It consists of the sum of stock represented by the operating level, the safety level, the repair-cycle level, and authorized-additive levels. DL1.1.73. Stocked Demand (SD). A demand-supported item for which established RO is based on actual recurring demands (including the transferred demands, as appropriate) at the activity. DL1.1.74. Stocked Insurance (SI). A non-demand-supported, essential item for replacement is not anticipated as a result of normal usage and for which an unacceptable lead time (procurement or order and shipping time (OST)) has been established. If failure is experienced, or loss occurs, through accident, abnormal equipment or system failure, or other unexpected occurrences, the lead time required to obtain a replacement would seriously hamper the operational capability of a critical facility or weapon system. DL1.1.75. Stocked Limited Demand (SLD). A demand-supported item for which there is anticipated usage, but the item does not meet the established economic stockage criteria. The established RO is based upon anticipated usage. DL1.1.76. Stocked Provisioning (SP). A non-demand-supported item specifically stocked to support a newly introduced end item for that period of time until requirements are forecast entirely upon actual demands. This period may not exceed 2 years. The established RO is based upon the asset positioning policy and anticipated usage developed during the provisioning process. DL1.1.77. Stratification Process. A uniform portrayal of requirements and assets application that is a computer-generated, time-phased simulation of actions causing changes in the supply position; e.g., procurement, repair, receipt, issue, terminations, and disposal of materiel. DL1.1.78. Supply Pipeline. The link from the end user to the retail level to the wholesale level of supply through which requisitions and materiel normally flow. DL1.1.79. Total Asset Visibility (TAV). The capability for both operational and logistics managers to obtain and act on information on the location, quantity, condition, movement, and status of assets throughout the DoD Logistics System. TAV includes all levels, and all secondary items, both consumable and reparable. DL1.1.80. Total Order-Ship Time. The time period extending from the date of a requisition until the date that the materiel is recorded on the requisitioner's inventory records. DL1.1.81. Unit of Issue. Denotes by what means we buy and ultimately issue materiel for our end-users/customers. Depending on the item, Unit of Issue can be quantity or physical measurement, or by container or shape of the item. Unit of Issue is standard for each item of supply across the Department of Defense. DL1.1.82. Weapon System and/or End Item Mission Essentiality Code. This code indicates whether the weapon system or end item is essential to the military mission of the Service. Weapon systems and/or end items are classified as either mission-essential or not mission-essential. DL1.1.82.1. Mission-Essential. That Service-designated materiel authorized for combat, combat support, combat service support, and combat readiness training forces and activities, including Reserve and National Guard activities, which is required to support approved emergency and/or war plans, and when the materiel is used to: DL1.1.82.1.1. Destroy the enemy's capability to continue war. DL1.1.82.1.2. Provide battlefield protection of personnel. DL1.1.82.1.3. Communicate under war conditions. DL1.1.82.1.4. Detect, locate, or maintain surveillance over the enemy. DL1.1.82.1.5. Provide combat transportation and support of personnel and materiel. DL1.1.82.1.6. Support training functions, but is suitable for employment under emergency plans to meet the purposes enumerated, herein. Mission-essential materiel is divided into two categories, as follows: DL1.1.82.1.6.1. Code A - Highest Priority Mission-Essential. That mission-essential materiel required to accomplish the military mission of activities assigned FAD I or FAD II. DL1.1.82.1.6.2. Code B - Lower Priority Mission-Essential. That mission-essential materiel required to accomplish the military mission of activities assigned FAD III, FAD IV, or FAD V. DL1.1.82.2. Not Mission-Essential. Materiel that does not qualify as mission essential falls into Code C. DL1.1.83. Weapon System Availability. A weapon system is available if it is capable of performing its intended mission. DL1.1.84. Wholesale Stock. Stock, regardless of funding sources, over which the Integrated Materiel Manager has asset knowledge and exercises unrestricted asset control to meet worldwide inventory management responsibilities. DL1.1.85. Wholesale Supply. The highest level of organized DoD supply, and as such, procures, repairs and maintains stocks to resupply the retail levels of supply. The terms "wholesale supply," "wholesale level of supply," and "wholesale echelon" are synonymous. C1. CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION C1.1. GENERAL C1.1.1. This Manual is a reference manual on how to develop each of the summary level stratification matrices. The objective is to provide the standard specifications for the mandatory Secondary Item Stratifications to ensure comparable results among all DoD Components. At the time of publication of this Manual, it is recognized that much of the detail data is not available from the current requirements and inventory systems in use by the Components. As the detail becomes available with the development and implementation of standard systems, it will be incumbent upon the Components to include that level of detail in the required summary matrices. Until that time, the matrices must at a minimum contain entries on the total lines for each of the levels and other requirements (i.e., Safety Level, Administrative Lead Time, etc.) at the wholesale level of supply. The Department is transitioning from a requirements computation system based on supply effectiveness goals to one based on weapon system availability, also known as readiness-based sparing (RBS). Since the latter approach is still under development, it cannot be fully implemented. However, stock levels established by RBS models shall cover demand- related pipeline and safety-level requirements. Unless otherwise noted, those levels are to be included in the matrices on the lines commonly used for recurring requirements. The Components will include a paragraph in the narrative submission advising what percentage of items and dollar value of requirements was computed by an alternate requirements determination method. In addition, a brief description of the methodology will be included. C1.1.2. This chapter discusses the purpose of the matrices and the process of stratifying assets against requirements in a prescribed priority and/or time sequence. It identifies each of the required matrices, their cutoff dates, and requirements for submission of the resulting data to the office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD). This chapter also describes each of the different requirements elements and types of assets included in the stratification process. C1.1.3. Chapters 2 through 6 set forth the detailed specifications for the basic stratification matrices, their subsets and NON-MANDATORY printout formats for each. Chapter 7 provides a method for transitioning the stratification data to the budget. C1.2. PURPOSE C1.2.1. The stratification processes will uniformly display the materiel requirements and associated asset status of individual secondary items and generate summaries of essential information. The stratification matrices will be based on data and factors used in the daily management of the individual items. The matrices will provide the foundation for developing secondary item procurement and repair budgets, determining the readiness status, and relating assets to the Approved Acquisition Objective. C1.2.2. The stratification reports generated by the Central Secondary Item Stratification (CSIS) and Local Secondary Item Stratification (LSIS) processes are valuable sources of information on the current and projected status of supply; however, they are not management reports. For management uses, the stratification data should be analyzed and the results selectively presented in more suitable forms (e.g., graphs and tables). The analyses should identify and highlight areas of management interest and areas needing attention, such as current and potential future asset imbalances (both asset shortages and overages), trends in requirements and assets, changes in leadtimes, readiness status including war reserves, and progress toward the attainment of specific management goals. C1.3. THE PROCESS C1.3.1. Stated simply, the stratification process is the application of assets, by type, for an individual item against the requirements for the same item in a prescribed priority and time sequence. The basic supply data pertaining to requirements and assets may be accumulated in any appropriate manner at the Component's option; however, for stratification purposes, the data must be applied, arrayed, and submitted in accordance with the specifications contained in this Manual. The matrices described in this Manual are summaries of individual national stock number (NSN) data. Unless specified otherwise, the summary data has been derived by the addition of like data from all applicable NSNs versus a calculation on the summary data. C1.3.2. The types of assets (e.g., retail, wholesale serviceable, unserviceable inducted and/or not inducted, on contract, on purchase request) will be sequenced from the most readily available for issue to the least readily available. The requirements (e.g., retail, war reserves, demands, safety level, repair cycle, leadtimes, and order quantities) will be sequenced from the most urgent to the least urgent. The most readily available type of asset (retail) will be applied against the requirements in priority sequence. If the most readily available assets are insufficient to satisfy the total requirement, the next most readily available assets will be applied, and so forth, until the requirements are satisfied or the assets are depleted. If the total assets exceed the requirements, the quantity of each type of asset beyond the requirements will be displayed. If the requirements exceed the assets, the deficit of each type of requirement will be displayed. The asset and requirement status of each item will be determined individually, on a quantitative basis, and converted to dollars to permit various levels of summarization. C1.3.3. All secondary item assets, regardless of how they are funded, shall be stratified in accordance with this Manual except for the following: C1.3.3.1. Assets already sold an issued from the lowest level of supply. C1.3.3.2. Assets owned by maintenance activities. C1.3.3.3. Property acquired for civil function purposes. C1.3.3.4. Defense Nuclear Agency assets. C1.3.3.5. National Security Agency assets. C1.3.3.6. Excess and surplus equipment at the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Office (DRMO). C1.3.3.7. DoD-owned foreign excess equipment. C1.3.3.8. Materiel in storage facilities of the reporting DoD Component owned by other DoD Components or other Federal Agencies. C1.3.3.9. Items installed or incorporated in a higher assembly. C1.3.4. The stratification process will begin with the actual assets (on hand and on order) and the requirements (demand forecast, levels, and lead times) as of the cutoff date (close of business of the last day of the quarter). This will reflect 3, 6, or 9 months of actual experience for the current year in the December, March, or June stratification, respectively. The September stratification cutoff will reflect the past fiscal year actual experience. The process will continue with the projection of the asset and requirement status at the end of the current (CY), apportionment (AY), and budget (BY) fiscal years (FYs). In the event biennial budgets are required, a budget year plus one (BY+l) FY will be added to the stratification. Those projections will be computed using the closing position and the simulation of subsequent issue, return, induction, delivery, award, and commitment transactions based on the lead time factors in the files. Table C1.T1. displays the number of months of actual and simulation required for each stratification. C1.4. STRATIFICATION PRODUCT INFORMATION C1.4.1. Matrices C1.4.1.1. The stratification process will produce a series of summary matrices, each designed to meet particular objectives. These matrices will be processed at standard and at latest acquisition price unless otherwise specified. The summary data submitted to OSD will be from the following matrices: C1.4.1.1.1. I - Procurement Program. Matrix I displays the dollar value of materiel that the reporting DoD Component requires to be either on hand or on order to sustain operations and the degree to which assets are available to meet those requirements. C1.4.1.1.2. II - Repair Program. Matrix II displays the dollar value at standard and repair price of requirements, assets, and any deficits for reparable secondary items. C1.4.1.1.3. III - Readiness Status. Matrix III is a snapshot of the dollar value of the supply system's capability to satisfy Logistic requirements as of a point in time by measuring asset availability against the requirements element. C1.4.1.1.4. IV - Approved Acquisition Objective & Retention. Matrix IV provides the dollar value of assets by the purpose for which held (i.e., approved acquisition objective, authorized retention, or potential DoD reutilization and/or disposal). C1.4.1.1.5. V - Retail Readiness, Requisitioning Objective, and Retention. Matrix V displays retail (supply systems or supply organizations, not the end user) level requirements, assets and overages and/or deficits. C1.4.1.2. To provide further insights into the status of inventory management and to assist in policy evaluation, the stratification can resummarize specific subcategories of items separately (e.g., items subject to weapon systems management, items in a "buy" position, and low-demand essential items). C1.4.2. Specifications C1.4.2.1. The specifications for each stratification matrix are presented in the subsequent chapters and define the categories of items to be included, the asset groupings, and the requirement elements to be displayed. The stub of the matrix (the vertical listing in the leftmost column) names each line-item entry. Those entries include the gross assets and deductions for those excluded followed by the requirements elements in descending priority sequence. The header of the matrix (the horizontal listing of the column heads) names the columnar entries. Those entries include requirements information and asset groupings (based on the immediacy of their availability for issue) in descending priority sequence from left to right (i.e., the most immediately available for issue -- serviceable on-hand assets -- is at the left and the least immediately available -- on-order commitments at the right). C1.4.2.2. The assets must be applied to requirements by individual item in the prescribed sequence and then summarized. Subsequently, the results may be rearranged to facilitate analyses. C1.4.3. Validation of stratification/Data. To ensure that the data contained in the stratification summaries is as current as possible, each Component must establish internal procedures and controls that require the establishment of reasonable parameters and priorities for the identification of stratification line items for review. The Component procedures must ensure That necessary corrections identified during the stratification review process are made to the master file data. C1.4.4. Summary-Level Data. OSD requires only summary stratifications at cutoff, not individual item stratifications. Table C1.T1. sets forth the summary stratification that are required on a semi-annual basis(March and September). In addition, the entire set of matrices must be generated for each Inventory Control Point (ICP) managing assets for a project. Table C1.T1. Summary of Matrices Required by OSD By budget project and by ICP a I II II IV V Total Procurement X X X Weapon System b X X X Buy Items X Low Demand Essential X Total Repair X Retail Only c X a) These summaries must be produced and maintained but will only be submitted upon request of OSD. ADUSD(MDM) must be informed by the component when it is unable to produce any of the subsets. b) Until such time as the requisition and Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) supply systems can record individual demand to specific weapon systems, this stratification is optional for DLA. c) Retail assets for which the ICP has visibility and that are included in wholesale requirements determination will be included in Tables I and II. All other retail assets will be reported in Table V only. C1.4.5. Cutoff Dates. Table C1.T2. displays the cutoff date, title, and number of months of simulation for the QSIS. The first stratification of the fiscal year is the September stratification (October 1 - September 30). Only the September and March stratifications are mandatory. The cutoff dates for the LSIS are the same but no simulations are required. When it is feasible, Components are encouraged to simulate for longer periods for use in preparing Program objective Memorandum (POM) submissions and may run optional computations as required. Table C1.T2. Cutoff Dates and Months of Simulation Stratification Asset at Cutoff Submission Due to OSD Mos of Actual CY AY BY September 30 January 15 12 0 12 12 December 31 N/A 3 9 12 12 March 31 July 15 6 6 12 12 June 30 N/A 9 3 12 12 C1.4.6. Submission of Stratification Data. OSD no longer requires the submission of hard copy stratification reports. With the exception of non-automated activities (reporting under Matrix V), all data are to be submitted in a media suitable for direct computer input. Required data elements are limited to submission identification, dollar values, counts, days, and percentages contained in the matrix cells/subcells. Data element names and in-the-clear titles as they appear in the optional printed formats in this Manual are not submitted. Any required narratives and/or explanations are submitted in hard copy. Components will implement the following procedures for stratification data submissions: C1.4.6.1. Data and/or narrative submissions shall be addressed to the office of the Assistant Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (ADUSD) Materiel and Distribution Management Policy, 3500 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-3500. A copy will be furnished to the Director for Revolving Funds, 11 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-1100. C1.4.6.2. Data and/or narratives shall be submitted to arrive at OSD by July 15 for the March cutoff and by January 15 for the September cutoff. Each Component must establish its cutoff date consistent with its internal review capabilities. C1.4.7. Dollar-Weighted Averages. For individual items, recurring requirement elements are expressed in terms of days. The repair cycle, order and/or ship time, and operating level determine the length of the retail pipeline. Repair cycle time (RCT), repair lead time (RLT), induction cycle time, administrative lead time (ALT), production lead time (PLT), and economic order quantity (EOQ) determine the length of the wholesale repair and procurement pipelines. For individual items, these times along with safety levels are expressed in terms of days. For summary stratifications, the individual item pipeline days must be dollar-weighted to provide a meaningful average lead time or safety level. The dollar-weighted average lead time is computed as follows: C1.4.7.1. For each item, calculate the value of 1 day of lead time by dividing the dollar value of the lead time by the number of days. C1.4.7.2. Calculate the total value of the lead time for all items in the summary. C1.4.7.3. Calculate the total value of 1 day of lead time for all items in the summary. C1.4.7.4. Divide the value of the lead times for all items in C1.4.7.2. by the value of 1 day of lead time for all items in C1.4.7.3. to obtain the dollar-weighted lead time days. Example: Dollar-Weighted Computation of Administrative Lead Time NSN ALT DAYS ALT $ VALUE Value of 1 one day ALT 1 30 2,800 93.33 2 240 180,000 750.00 3 180 1,250,000 6,944,44 Total 1,432,800 7,787.77 Dollar-weighted ALT = $1,432,800/7,787 or 183.891 days, rounded to the nearest whole number, 184 days. C1.5. REQUIREMENTS The total requirements for an item may consist of several types, each computed in a different manner and for different purposes. The stratification matrices prescribe separate entries for each of those types of requirements. The major categories of requirements are war reserves, demands, recurring and non-recurring requirements, and dues out. Secondary items whose requirements are computed, based on other approved requirements determination models, such as readiness-based sparing models, will use the levels established to cover the demand-related pipeline and safety-level requirements unless specified otherwise on specific matrices. C1.5.1. War Reserves C1.5.1.1. War Reserve Requirements. War reserve is the DoD inventory of mission-essential materiel required to attain operational objectives in the scenarios and other stockage objectives approved for programming in the Secretary of Defense Planning Guidance. Mission-essential materiel is materiel that is critical to the combat mission of a unit or weapon system and has minimal civilian sector availability. Materiel stocks will be limited to that portion of the planning period the unit will be in the theater of operation. All war reserves will be fully visible to and intensively managed by the integrated materiel manager. Only war reserve assets acquired with war reserve appropriations may be protected by the wartime or contingency materiel allocation system. These protected assets, if issued for other uses, i.e., peacetime requirements, humanitarian support, etc., may be repurchased with the funds generated from the sale of materiel and subsequently protected. Any other war reserve asset must be considered as available to meet peacetime requirements during the stratification process. C1.5.1.2. War Reserve Computation. The war reserve materiel requirements and assets will be computed for war reserves in accordance with DoD Directive 3110.6. (reference (a)), the Defense Planning Guidance, and DoD 4140.1-R (reference (c)). The war reserve requirement is computed as of the budget year (i.e., the FY95 war reserve requirement was computed in March, 1993; the FY94 requirement was computed in March, 1992; etc.). For stratification purposes, the approved war reserve computation applicable to each FY is used. DoD Component activities that have not processed an undated war reserve computation will use the latest computation available and include a discussion of why war reserve materiel requirements were not recalculated in the narrative portion of the War Reserve Inventory Report, Report Control Symbol DD-P&L(A)1913. C1.5.2. Recurring Requirements C1.5.2.1. General. Subsequent to the initial issue to fill the pipeline, recurring requirements are established to provide replenishment support for operational units and other programs of a recurring nature such as depot maintenance and repetitive assembly programs. Limited demand items and Cooperative Logistics Supply Support Arrangements (CLSSA) are considered recurring requirements for stratification purposes. C1.5.2.2. Historical Demands. Demands are based on a history or prior demands, on usage rates in conjunction with program factors (e.g., flying hours, operating hours, end-item densities), depot maintenance programs, readiness requirements, and CLSSA. C1.5.2.3. Limited Demand. Limited demand requirements will reflect items for which historical or anticipated demands are insufficient to justify stockage on an economic basis, but for which mission essentiality requirements justify stockage. Safety levels are not authorized for limited demand items. C1.5.2.4. Establishment of Levels. Levels will be established for various segments of the recurring requirements, (i.e., safety level, RCT, PLT, ALT, and EOQ), and orders will be placed to replenish those levels as stocks are issued. In an ideal situation, all levels except the economic order quantity would be continually filled with assets on hand or on order. C1.5.2.5. Safety Level. The safety level (SL) will reflect the quantity of assets required for continued operation in the event of minor interruption of normal replenishment or unpredictable fluctuation in demands. Two types of safety levels are displayed in the stratification tables -- customer wait time and weapon system operational readiness. The safety level for a specific National Stock Number (NSN) will be computed one way or the other or by another approved method as described in DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3 (reference (c)). Customer wait time goals will be computed for demand based non-weapon system items. Weapon system operational readiness goals will be based on attaining readiness goals for items managed in accordance with the Secondary Item Weapon System Management (SIWSM) concept. C1.5.2.6. Repair Cycle Levels. Repair cycle levels are outlined in Chapter 3 of reference (c). RCT will be the quantity of reparable items required to sustain operations during the repair cycle that commences when a maintenance replacement is initiated and ends when the unserviceable asset is returned to stock in a serviceable condition. This will include removal, awaiting shipment, in-transit, in pre repair screening, in-process of repair, and being returned to serviceable stock. The RCT will be stratified to the field repair cycle or the depot repair cycle, since these are the two mutually exclusive processes by which an unserviceable item is returned to a ready-for issue (RFI) condition. C1.5.2.6.1. Field Repair Cycle. Field repair cycle will be recorded as the time from the date the initial demand for the replacement of an unserviceable item is entered into the supply system until either: C1.5.2.6.1.1. The date the item is restored to serviceable and issuable condition by an organizational and/or intermediate maintenance activity, or C1.5.2.6.1.2. The date it is determined to be beyond the capability of an organizational and/or intermediate maintenance activity to repair. Unserviceable assets repaired at the field level will be processed through the retail repair cycle. C1.5.2.6.2. Depot Repair Cycle C1.5.2.6.2.1. The depot repair cycle time will include retrograde time (for Components with retrograde intransit visibility), batch accumulation and transfer-to-maintenance time, and in-maintenance (maintenance turnaround) and return time. It relates to the interval from the time an unserviceable asset is recorded on the inventory records of a depot maintenance activity until the time it is restored to RFI condition. Unserviceable assets that are beyond the repair capability of the field levels of maintenance and are repaired at the wholesale level of maintenance will be processed through the depot repair cycle. An unserviceable asset that is beyond economic repair is normally condemned or washed out. C1.5.2.6.2.2. The depot repair cycle level represents the quantity of assets required by the wholesale system to support demands on the supply system during the depot repair cycle time. It is a "net" requirement of the demands less the on-hand assets and due-in from procurement offset by potential recoverable unserviceable assets expected to be returned during the repair cycle time. C1.5.2.6.2.3. The repair lead time level (RLT) will be the gross quantity of demands upon which the ICP is allowed to base maintenance requirements beyond the date of the last induction (repair stratification) or date of last buy (procurement stratification) for the year. The quantity will be based on the total demands forecasted to occur from the time of induction into a depot maintenance activity (organic, inter-Service, or contractor) until the assets have been repaired and recorded ready-for-issue on the ICP's records. The induction cycle will be the normal planned interval between the induction of batches of unserviceable assets into maintenance. It will be based on the authorized batch size and is used in the simulation-to-repair process. The induction cycle is equal to the lesser of total demands during the batch accumulation time or the unserviceable, not inducted on-hand plus anticipated unserviceable returns. C1.5.2.7. Administrative Lead time (ALT) Level. ALT is outlined in DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3 (reference (c)). It will begin when an item's wholesale asset level is reduced to the reorder point and will end on the date the contractual instrument is executed. The ALT will include the time periods required for identification of the buy requirement; the review, approval and documentation of the purchase request and technical data review; and the processing and execution of the contractual instrument. This level is the quantity of Due-In-Committed assets the ICP is allowed to retain to support demands on the supply system during the ALT. C1.5.2.8. Production Lead Time (PLT) Level. PLT will begin at the end of ALT, or when the contractual instrument is executed, and will end when the material is received or when the date of confirmation of the first significant delivery has been received. This level is the quantity of assets that the ICP is allowed to procure and retain Due-In-Contracted to support the demands on the supply system during the PLT. C1.5.2.9. Economic order Quantity (EOQ) Level. The EOQ, or buy frequency, will represent the normal planned interval between procurements. The duration of the cycle may be based on the standard Wilson EOQ formula or modifications of it. In terms of quantities, it is the requirement that represents the forecasted demands expected to occur between procurement actions. C1.5.2.9.1. At the time of award, quantity discounts or other economic considerations may warrant the procurement of a larger than normal quantity. Only actual additives resulting from awards made before the stratification cutoff will be reflected. Future additives will neither be anticipated nor simulated. C1.5.2.9.2. When a buy occurs within the stratification period, the EOQ establishes the full resource requirement including the portion that extends into the next FY. When no buy occurs within the stratification period, the EOQ protects only the assets procured in accordance with DoD policy in a previous period; therefore, the EOQ for buy in prior periods never exceeds the amount of the net available assets (on hand, due in, and on order) beyond the reorder point. The EOQ does not apply to insurance, life-of-type (L-O-T) items, and non-CLSSA foreign military sales requirements. C1.5.2.9.3. The EOQ is the full EOQ at the date of last buy for those items that had a buy during the computation period; it is that portion of the full EOQ remaining at the end of the computation period for those items for which the most recent buy occurred in a prior period. C1.5.2.10. Procurement Quantity. The procurement-quantity will represent the secondary item buys calculated by other approved requirements determination methods, such as readiness based sparing models, simulated to occur during the computation period. C1.5.3. Non-Recurring Requirements C1.5.3.1. General. Non-recurring requirements are divided into five kinds: insurance, L-O-T, initial spares, planned programs, and foreign military sales. Unlike recurring requirements, safety levels are not computed for non-recurring requirements. With the exception of insurance and planned programs, the ALT, PLT, EOQ, and repair cycle will be computed to determine when budgeting and acquisition actions must be initiated to have the assets available for issue when required. C1.5.3.2. Insurance. An insurance item is a stocked, essential item for which no failure is predicted through normal usage. If failure were to be experienced, or a loss should occur through accident, abnormal equipment or system failure, or other unexpected occurrence, lack of replacement would seriously hamper the operational capabilityof a weapon system I end item or component. Insurance items will have insurance requirements solely; they will not have safety levels or lead time requirements. Only one minimum replacement unit of an item may be stocked for insurance purposes. Normally, whenever an insurance item is issued, it may be replenished. C1.5.3.3. Life-of-Type (L-O-T). L-O-T items will be procured on a one-time basis, when all cost-effective and prudent alternatives have been exhausted, for the total future issues of an item that will no longer be produced after production of the major end item is completed. The procurement quantity shall be based on demand or on engineering estimates or mortality sufficient to support the applicable equipment until phased out. Some items are classified as L-O-T at the time they enter into the supply system; some other items enter the supply system as normal replenishment and are subsequently reclassified to L-O-T. Those latter items are ones normally produced by a sole source that decides not to produce them any longer and no other source can be found. Issue requirements are forecast for the balance of the life of the item, and a L-O-T buy is made. In the case in which production is terminated, the item is on hand. At the time the L-O-T assets are on hand, requirements for the year will be reflected in the forecast of demands being simulated as L-O-T demands. The remaining assets will be reflected in the L-O-T objective as part of the approved acquisition objective. Once the L-O-T buy has been made, the item should never exhibit a deficit in the stratification. C1.5.3.4. Initial Spares. Initial spares will represent the one-time requirement to initially establish retail stockage in support of the deployment of new equipment or to augment retail stockage in support of the deployment of additional quantities of equipment. Additional quantities of equipment may be deployed more that once to the same bases and/or units or to different bases and/or units. Each deployment constitutes a separate requirement that does not recur for the same group of end items. Initial spares requirements may occur concurrently with recurring and other non-recurring requirements. Initial spares are discussed in DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 1 (reference (c)). C1.5.3.5. Planned Programs. The wide variety of planned programs will include modernization programs, modification programs, one-time assembly of sets or kits, Government-furnished materiel for end-item production contracts, and ship overhaul programs. Planned programs will exclude planned depot maintenance programs that are considered recurring even though modernization and modification may occur in conjunction with depot overhaul or repair. Planned programs may continue over several years but would involve the same engineering change to the same end item only once. C1.5.3.6. Foreign Military Sales (FMS). Only those non-CLSSA FMS for which funded requisitions have been received are valid requirements for stratification. FMS requirements will be reflected only as materiel obligations with either future or past delivery dates. If on-hand assets are not sufficient, the balance should be placed on order as soon as required to meet the Required Delivery Dates. All requirements should have assets on order, on hand or a deficit reflected to offset the requirements. C1.5.4. Due Out. A due out will occur when a using activity submits a requisition for an item that is not immediately available for issue and the requisition is recorded as a commitment for issuing the quantity from future stock or purchasing it for direct delivery. When retail and wholesale requirements are reflected in the same table, due out to the included retail activities should not be reflected in the wholesale segment because that would duplicate the retail due out. However, dues out for those activities not included in the table; e.g., other Military Services and FMS, should be included. All requirements should have assets on order, on hand or a deficit reflected to offset the requirements. C1.5.5. Retention. The retention category in the stratification will include economic and contingency retention. These retention categories will be a stock retention objective only. C1.5.5.1. Economic Retention. Economic retention will be the portion of the quantity on hand above the Approved Acquisition objective that is determined to be more economical to retain for future peacetime issues instead of replacement of future issues by procurement. C1.5.5.2. Contingency Retention. Contingency retention will be the portion of the quantity on hand above the Approved Acquisition objective for which there is no predictable demand or quantifiable requirements, and that will be retained for specific contingencies. C1.6. ASSETS C1.6.1. Primary Inventory Control Activity and/or Service Item Control Activity (PICA/SICA). When the DoD Component is the Integrated Materiel Manager and/or Primary Inventory Control Activity (IMM/PICA) for an item, all assets, except for excluded assets, in the custody of the ICP and recorded on the accountable records will be reported as gross assets in the stratification process. When the DoD Component is the Service Item Control Activity (SICA) for an item, gross assets will represent those assets that are on hand or due-in to the SICA and recorded on its accountable records. The excluded assets (identified in Table C1.T3., below) are not reflected in the stratification reports. The net assets are equal to the gross assets minus the excluded assets. C1.6.2. Gross Assets. Gross assets as reflected in Matrix I will provide the basis for the reconciliation of inventory records and financial records. The assets reflected in Matrix III, processed at the latest acquisition value, will provide the basis for the secondary item portion of the DoD inventory report, DD-M(A)1000, required by DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 4 (reference (c)). Categories of excluded assets are described in subparagraph C1.6.2.1., below. C1.6.2.1. Excluded Assets. Some assets may not be suitable for application to requirements because of their condition or availability. The excluded assets consist of those assigned total and partial exempt condition codes, those forecast for condemnation, unserviceable returns beyond the date of last buy, unserviceable returns beyond the date of last induction, and assets being held by one activity but are under the ownership of another activity. Each category of excluded assets is reported on a separate asset line and is deducted from the gross assets to arrive at the net assets available for application to the requirements. C1.6.2.1.1. Exemptions - Total and Partial. The condition of some assets may make them exempt from application to requirements. For example, items assigned Condition Codes H, Condemned, and S, Scrap, cannot economically be made suitable for issue and are therefore totally exempt from application. Items assigned Condition Codes such as J, Serviceable-Suspended, and L, Serviceable-Litigation, are partially exempt because some portion of the gross assets may not become available for issue. The DoD Components may reduce the gross assets with conditions codes identified as partially exempt based on their historical experience when less than 100 percent of the assets are expected to become available to satisfy requirements. The amount of the reduction is shown on the "Exemption" line. C1.6.2.1.2. Potential Condemnations C1.6.2.1.2.1. Unserviceable assets on hand and due in on ICP records and those forecast to be received during the simulation will be discounted to recognize the potential condemnations in the repair process. The amount of discounted unserviceable reparable assets will appear on the "Condemnation" line. The discount rates for assets not inducted into a maintenance activity will be based on the depot-level condemnation experience. C1.6.2.1.2.2. As of any cutoff, the inducted assets have been in maintenance an average of one-half of the repair cycle time. During that time, some assets have been condemned; therefore, applying the full final condemnation rate would understate the recoverable assets. The appropriate discount rate for assets that are already inducted into maintenance is dependent on the operations of the specific maintenance activity. If condemnations occur early in the process and are recorded immediately, the rate should be low. Conversely, if the condemnations occur late in the process or are not recorded immediately, the rate should be higher. Components will use rates that are most representative of the way their maintenance activities (including contractors) operate. C1.6.2.1.3. Beyond Date of Last Induction. For the simulationperiods, CY, AY and BY, projected recoverable unserviceable returns are applied up to the date of the last induction in the stratifications. Returns expected to be received subsequent to the last induction are not applied to the requirements in that fiscal year, but are carried over to those of the next fiscal year. The excluded assets are displayed on a separate asset line in the matrices. C1.6.2.2. Condition Codes. Table C1.T3. displays the Military Standard Transaction and Reporting Procedures (MILSTRAP) condition codes, their definition, and their stratification assignment, including whether they are totally or partially exempt. The exhibit also indicates whether the partially exempt and nonexempt condition codes are applied as serviceable or unserviceable and whether assets may be discounted. C1.6.3. Projected Assets. Two types of assets are considered in the Stratifications: actual assets as of the cutoff date and projected assets generated by the simulation process. The CY will begin with the assets on hand at the close of the quarter and will simulate the issue, returns, receipts from procurement and repair, inductions, awards, and procurement requests. The simulation will result in a projected asset position at the end of the CY. That closing asset position then becomes the opening position for the AY. The simulation process will be repeated for each of the subsequent fiscal years and end with the simulated asset position at the end of the BY. Table C1.T3. Asset Condition Code Assignment Condition Code MILSTRAP Definition Exempta T/Pb Apply Servicable Apply Unserviceable Discount Condemnation A, B and C Serviceable NO X NO E Unserviceable NO X NO F Unserviceable -Repairable -Consumable NO YES T X YES G Unserviceable -Incomplete NO X YES H and S Unserviceable -Condemned -Scrap YES YES T T J, K and L Serviceable -Suspended -Odd Lot -Litigation YES YES YES P P P X X X NO NO NO M Unserviceable -In-work NO X YES P Unserviceable -Reclamation YES T Q and R Suspended -Quality -Condition YES YES P P X X NO NO a) Exempt - not included in processes. b) T/P - Total/Partial inculsion. C1.6.4. Potential Reutilization and/or Disposal Materiel. Assets above all authorized retention levels that: C1.6.4.1. Have been identified by an item manager for possible disposal but with potential for reutilization within the Component; or C1.6.4.2. Have the potential for being sent by an item manager to the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Service (DRMS) for possible reutilization by another Component, a Federal, State or local government agency or sale to the public are stratified into the potential reutilization category. C1.6.4.3. These assets remain in this category until they are either reutilized by the Component or transferred to DRMS. C2. CHAPTER 2 MATRIX I - PROCUREMENT PROGRAM C2.1. INTRODUCTION C2.1.1. The following description and elements apply to the stratification display for inventory management analysis. At the summary level, Matrix I displays the dollar value of materiel that the reporting DoD Component requires to be either on hand or on order to sustain operations; it also shows the degree to which assets are available to meet those requirements and any deficiencies. Column A (Memo) displays a time measurement for safety level, order/ship time, and operating level for retail requirements; a time measurement for safety level, repair cycle, ALT, PLT, and EOQ for wholesale requirements for individual items; and a dollar-weighted average of all items in the summary matrix. C2.1.2. Matrix I is composed of four subsets, each portraying the materiel requirements and associated assets for a specific time frame. The Opening Position, Matrix I(A), provides a snapshot of the requirements, assets, and deficits for secondary items recorded in the ICP's item record file as of the cutoff date (i.e., as of the close of business on the last day of the quarter). Matrices I(B) through I(D) simulate the requirements, assets, and deficits as of the date of last buy in the current,apportionment, and budget years. If no buy is projected for an item, requirements, assets and deficits will be simulated as of the end of those years. The CY starts at the beginning of the first quarter after the cutoff. C2.1.3. The requirement elements are grouped into war reserve and peacetime requirements, with retail and wholesale subgroups. The subgroups are also categorized as to type of requirement (e.g., recurring and non-recurring requirements). The requirement elements are listed in priority sequence. The sum of war reserves, retail requisitioning objective, and wholesale requirements objective provide the total worldwide requirement. C2.1.4. A description follows of the report headings, columnar entries (Columns A through L), line-item entries, and any special instructions for selected cells, e.g., Cell 1L (Line 1, Column L). The abbreviated title to appear in the data submission is shown in brackets. C2.2. REPORT HEADINGS C2.2.1. Matrix I(A) - Opening Position. This matrix shows the actual requirements and assets as of the cutoff date and does not include any forecasts or simulations. It includes a memorandum entry of past actual demand and/or usage data. The heading to be used is as follows: SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION FUNDING CATEGORY____________ - OPENING MATRIX I(A) - PROCUREMENT PROGRAM As of____________ ___, 19___ (dollars in thousands) C2.2.2. Matrix I(B) Current Year (CY). Matrix I(B) shows the requirements and assets projected for the months remaining in the first simulation period. The period represents a full 12 months for the September 30 cutoff and 6 months for the March 31 cutoff. The dues out and insurance requirements displayed in Column B are the same as those reflected in Matrix I(A). All other requirements are simulated as of the date of the last buy or end of the year for items not in a buy position. Unserviceable returns for the CY (Column H) will represent recorded due-in assets as of the cutoff and/or forecast of unserviceable returns based on current computations. All other assets are as of the cutoff. The heading to be used is as follows: SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION FUNDING CATEGORY____________ - CURRENT MATRIX I(B) - PROCUREMENT PROGRAM As of____________ ___, 19___ (dollars in thousands) C2.2.3. Matrix I(C) - Apportionment Year (AY). This matrix shows the requirements and assets projected for the full 12 months in the apportionment year. The projected demands for the simulation period are displayed in Column A (Memo). The due out and insurance requirements displayed in Column B, Requirements, are those that the simulation shows will exist at the end of the CY. All other requirements are simulated as of the date of the last buy or end of the AY for items not in a buy position. Unserviceable returns are the forecast of returns projected to be received during the AY. All other assets are those simulated to exist at the end of the CY. The heading to be used is as follows: SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION FUNDING CATEGORY____________ - APPORTIONMENT MATRIX I(C) - PROCUREMENT PROGRAM As of____________ ___, 19___ (dollars in thousands) C2.2.4. Matrix I(D) - Budget Year (BY). Matrix I(D) shows the requirements and assets projected for the full 12 months in the BY. The projected demands for the simulation period are displayed in Column A (Memo). The due out and insurance requirements displayed in Column B, Requirements, are the same as those that the simulation shows will exist at the end of the AY. All other requirements are simulated as of the date of the last buy or end of the BY for items not in a buy position. Unserviceable returns are the forecast of returns projected to be received during the BY. All other assets are those simulated to exist at the end of the AY. The heading to be used is as follows: SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION FUNDING CATEGORY____________ - BUDGET MATRIX I(D) - PROCUREMENT PROGRAM As of____________ ___, 19___ (dollars in thousands) C2.3. COLUMNAR ENTRIES C2.3.1. Column A - Memorandum [Memo]. Column A provides information about the requirement defined in the numbered line entry (e.g., the number of days of demand represented by the requirement element or the duration of the lead time). The requirements for memorandum entries are specified below. C2.3.2. Column B - Requirements [Requirements]. Column B shows the quantitative requirement for the element defined in the line entry as of the end of the period. C2.3.3. Column C - Retail Assets [Retail Assets]. Column C shows the serviceable and unserviceable on-hand assets and the assets in transit (due in) from the wholesale level of supply as of the end of the period. Retail assets are applied against all war reserve requirements first and the retail peacetime requirements second; after that, any unapplied retail assets are applied against wholesale requirements. WHOLESALE ASSETS (COLUMNS D THROUGH J) C2.3.4. Column D - Serviceable On-Hand Assets [Serv. On-Hand]. Column D shows the serviceable assets on hand at the wholesale level of supply in Condition Codes A, B, C, D, or E and any Condition Code J, K, L, or O assets not exempted by Table C1.T3. as of the end of the period. C2.3.5. Column E - Due In Other (Due-In Other]. Column E shows the serviceable due-in assets (same condition codes as in Column D) to the wholesale level of supply from sources other than procurement or maintenance as of the end of the period. This element will include all assets due in from field returns, disassembly of sets, kits and outfits, fabrication of items, and return of loans. C2.3.6. Column F - Unserviceable On-Hand: Inducted [Unser. On-Hand: Inducted]. Column F shows the quantities of unserviceable assets on hand that are recorded in the accountable records in Condition Code M (include Condition Code G if funds have been obligated) and those quantities due-in from contractor maintenance and recorded in the due-in file as a DIC "DFM" as of the end of the period. C2.3.7. Column G - Unserviceable On-Hand: Not Inducted [Unser. On-Hand: Not Ind.]. Column G shows the quantity of unserviceable assets on-hand in Condition Code F (include Condition Code G if funds have not been obligated) as of the end of the period. C2.3.8. Column H - Unserviceable Returns [Unserv. Returns]. Column H displays firm due-in unserviceable assets (intransit) as of the cutoff for the opening position or the unserviceable returns forecast to be received in the FY. C2.3.9. Column I - On-Order: Contract [On-Order: Contract]. Column I shows the quantity of assets due in from procurement for which funds have been obligated and not disbursed as of the end of the period. The column includes assets in a suspended stage because of legal consideration (e.g., strikes, defaults, and suspended contracts). C2.3.10. Column J - On-Order: Commitment [On-Order: Commit]. Column J shows the quantity of assets due in from procurement for which a procurement request has been initiated at the item's reorder or buy point and a contract not yet awarded as of the end of the period. It DOES NOT include pre-commitment and planning procurement requests initiated before the item reaches the reorder point. C2.3.11. Column K - Deficit [Deficit]. Column K shows the quantity of an item's requirement from Column B that exceeds the sum of the assets in Columns C through J. C2.4. LINE ITEM ENTRIES C2.4.1. Assets C2.4.1.1. Line 1 - Gross Assets, Stratification Cutoff [Gross Assets]. Line 1 shows all assets on hand, due in, and committed from all sources that are owned by the reporting DoD Component and under the control of the wholesale inventory manager as of the cutoff date for Matrix I(A) or as projected at the beginning of the fiscal year simulation for Matrices I(B) - I(D). The only exceptions are those assets excluded from stratification (Chapter 1, Table C1.T3.). Column H will contain the total anticipated unserviceable returns for the FY for Matrices I(B) - I(D). C2.4.1.2. Line 2 - Exempt Assets [Exemptions]. Line 2 shows those gross assets that are not applicable to requirements in the stratification process based on DoD policy. (See Chapter 1, section C1.6., for details.) C2.4.1.3. Line 3 - Forecast of Condemnations [Condemnations]. Line 3 applies only to unserviceable assets on hand (Columns F and G) and due in (Column H). This element displays the value of the unserviceable reparables that are expected to be condemned, based on current washout rates, during the overhaul and/or repair process. Assets discounted on this line will not be stratified to any other element. (See Chapter 1, section C1.6., for details.) C2.4.1.4. Line 4 - Forecast of Recoverable Unserviceable Returns Beyond the Date of Last Buy (DLB) [Beyond DLB]. Line 4 applies only to unserviceable returns (Column H) for the CY, AY, and BY. It is not used in Matrix I(A), Opening Position. This element displays the value of recoverable unserviceable returns that are forecast to arrive subsequent to the last buy for the year. If there is no buy during the period, this entry will be blank. (See Chapter 1, section C1.6., for details.) C2.4.1.5. Line 5 - Net Available Assets (for Stratification) [Net Assets]. Line 5 equals Gross Assets on Line 1 minus the sum of the excluded assets on Lines 2, 3, and 4 for columns C through J. C2.4.2. Requirements. This section describes the priority sequencing of secondary item requirements. The Department is transitioning from a requirements computation system based on supply effectiveness goals to one based on weapon system availability, such as readiness-based sparing (RBS). Since the latter approach is still under development, it cannot be fully implemented. However, stock levels established by RBS models shall cover demand-related pipeline and safety-level requirements. Unless otherwise noted, those levels are to be included in the matrices on the lines commonly used for recurring requirements. The Components will include a paragraph in the narrative submission advising what percentage of items and dollar value of requirements was computed by an alternate requirements determination method. In addition, a brief description of the methodology will be included. C2.4.2.1. Line 6 - War Reserve Requirements [War Reserves]. Line 6 is the war reserve requirement that must be reserved at the retail activities or is located at the wholesale depot prior to hostilities. It is the total of the retail and wholesale war reserves, line 6a plus 6b. C2.4.2.1.1. Line 6a - Retail Protectable War Reserve [Retail Protected]. Line 6a shows the portion of the war reserve that is stored at the retail activities. This requirement includes items with Reason for Stockage Code (RSC) SW as defined in DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3 (reference (c)). (See DoD Directive 3110.6 (reference (a)) and this Manual, Chapter 1, paragraph C1.5.1., for details.) C2.4.2.1.2. Line 6b - Wholesale War Reserve [Wholesale]. Line 6b shows the war reserves at the wholesale level. It is the sum of lines 6b(1) and 6b(2). C2.4.2.1.2.1. Line 6b(1) - Protected War Reserves[Protected WR]. Line 6b(1) shows the war reserve assets that are protected for emergency use in the year of simulation. C2.4.2.1.2.2. Line 6b(2) - non-protected War Reserves [Non- Protected WR]. Line 6b(2) shows that portion of the war reserve materiel requirement (WRMR) for which funding has not been approved and assets are not protected in the year of simulation. C2.4.2.2. Retail Requirements C2.4.2.2.1. Line 7 - Stock Due Out [Dues Out]. Line 7 shows the quantity requisitioned by a using activity and no assets are available for issue. A commitment is recorded as of the cutoff date to issue from future stock or purchase assets for direct delivery. This entry is the quantity due out at the beginning of the period. C2.4.2.2.2. Line 8 - Safety Level [Safety Level]. Line 8 shows the quantity of an item that is required at the retail level to ensure continued operations in the event of fluctuations in demands or order and/or ship time. The safety level for an item is computed either as a customer wait time goal or as a weapon system operational readiness goal; not as both. Line 8 is the sum of lines 8a and 8b for columns B through L. C2.4.2.2.2.1. Line 8a - Customer Wait Time Goal [Customer Wait Time]. Line 8a shows the quantity of an item that is required at the retail level to ensure a targeted variable (may be fixed) goal. It is computed in accordance with the method shown in DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3 (reference (c)), or another approved method. C2.4.2.2.2.2. Line 8b - Operational Readiness Goal Operational-Readiness]. Line 8b shows the quantity of an item that is required at the retail level to ensure an established weapon system operational readiness goal is met for items managed in accordance with the Secondary Item Weapon System Management (SIWSM) concept. C2.4.2.2.3. Line 9 - Limited-Demand Objective [Limited Demand]. Line 9 shows the quantity of an essential item with anticipated usage that must be stocked at the retail level to maintain operational capability of a critical facility or weapon system even though the item fails to meet the established stockage criteria. The retail requirement is applicable to items whose RSC is SL as defined in Chapter 3 of reference (c). C2.4.2.2.4. Line 10 - Insurance Stockage Objective [Insurance]. Line 10 shows the quantity of items that are not expected to be replaced because of normal usage but their non-availability would seriously affect the operational capability of a critical facility or weapon system. The retail insurance stockage objective requirement is applicable to items with RSC SI as defined in Chapter 3 of reference (c). Safety, lead time, and operating quantities are not authorized for insurance items. C2.4.2.2.5. Line 11 - Initial spares Requirement [Initial Spares]. Line 11 shows the quantity of an item specifically stocked to support a newly introduced end item during the demand development period. This time may not exceed 2 years beyond IOC date. The retail requirement is applicable to items whose RSC is SP as defined in Chapter 3 of reference (c). C2.4.2.2.6. Line 12 - Field Repair Cycle Level [Field Repair Cycle]. Line 12 shows the quantity of an item needed to meet demands during the time an unserviceable asset is being repaired at the field level. The Field Repair Cycle is defined in Chapter 3 of reference (c). C2.4.2.2.7. Line 13 - Order and Shipping Time Level [Order Ship Time]. Line 13 shows the quantity of an item required to sustain operations during the interval between the time a retail stock point processes a replenishment requisition to a source of supply and the time the item is received. C2.4.2.2.8. Line 14 - Operating Level [Operating Level]. Line 14 shows the quantity of an item needed to sustain operations at the retail level of supply in the interval between replenishment requisitions. C2.4.2.2.9. Line 15 - Retail Requisitioning Objective [Requisitioning Objective]. Line 15 is the sum of Lines 6a and 7 through 14 for columns B through K. C2.4.2.2.10. Line 16 - Assets Beyond Retail Requisitioning Objective [Assets Beyond RO]. Line 16 is Line 5 minus Line 15 for columns C through J. C2.4.2.3. Wholesale Requirements C2.4.2.3.1. Line 17 - Dues Out [Dues Out]. Line 17 shows the total quantity due out established. Recurring demand-based dues-out are reported on line 17a, and nonrecurring demand based dues-out are reported separately on lines 17b through 17f. These entries are the quantities at the beginning of the period. Line 17 is the sum of lines 17a through 17f for columns B through K. (See the Chapter 1, paragraph C1.5.4., for details.) C2.4.2.3.1.1. Line 17a - Recurring [Recurring]. Line 17a shows only the replenishment requisitions (includes CLSSA) for which stock is not available for issue at the wholesale level of supply. C2.4.2.3.1.2. Line 17b - Insurance [Insurance]. Line 17b shows dues out established for requisitions that cannot be satisfied immediately from assets on hand for items coded as insurance. C2.4.2.3.1.3. Line 17c - Life-Of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 17c shows dues out established for requisitions that cannot be satisfied immediately from assets on hand for L-O-T items. C2.4.2.3.1.4. Line 17d - Initial Spares [Initial Spares]. Line 17d shows dues out established for past-due initial spares. C2.4.2.3.1.5. Line 17e - Planned Program [Planned Programs]. Line 17e shows dues out for past-due planned programs. C2.4.2.3.1.6. Line 17f - Foreign Military Sales [FMS (non-CLSSA)]. Line 17f shows dues out established for funded non-CLSSA FMS requisitions that cannot be satisfied immediately from assets on hand [includes passed required delivery dates (RDDs) and future RDDS]. C2.4.2.3.2. Line 18 - Total Demands [Total Demands]. Lines 18 and 18a-18d are used for Matrices I(B) through I(D); they are not used for Matrix I(A), Opening Position. Line 18 shows the estimated demand for the issue of items (exclusive of those shown as a due out) from the beginning of the FY to the date of the last buy or the end of the year for items without a buy. No demands are forecast for insurance items. Line 18 is the sum of lines 18a through 18d for columns B through K. C2.4.2.3.2.1. Line 18a - Recurring [Recurring]. Line 18a shows the portion of the forecast of total demands that represents net recurring demands. C2.4.2.3.2.2. Line 18b - Life-Of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 18b shows the portion of the forecast of total demand that represents L-O-T demands. C2.4.2.3.2.3. Line 18c - Initial Spares [Initial Spares]. Line 18c shows the portion of the forecast of total demands that represents initial spares demands. C2.4.2.3.2.4. Line 18d - Planned Program [Planned Program]. Line 18d shows the portion of the forecast of total demands that represents planned program demands. C2.4.2.3.3. Line 19 - Safety Level Total [Safety Level]. Line 19 shows the quantity of an item that is required to ensure continued operations in the event of fluctuation of demands or lead-times. Line 19 is the sum of lines 19a and 19b for columns B through L. C2.4.2.3.3.1. Line 19a - Customer Wait Time Goal [Customer Wait Time]. Line 19a shows that quantity (may be a fixed quantity) of an item required to meet a targeted customer wait time goal. It is computed in accordance with either the method shown in DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3 (reference (c)), or another approved method. C2.4.2.3.3.2. Line 19b - Weapon System Operational Readiness Goal [Operational Readiness]. Line 19b shows that quantity of an item required to ensure that an established weapon system operational readiness goal is met for items managed in accordance with the SIWSM concept. C2.4.2.3.4. Line 20 - Insurance Objective [Insurance Objective]. Line 20 shows the maximum on-hand and on-order inventory (plus obligations) authorized for items coded as insurance (DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3, reference (c)). Safety, lead time, and economic order quantity levels are not authorized for insurance items. C2.4.2.3.5. Line 21 - Life-Of-Type On-Hand Objective [L-O-T Objective]. Line 21 shows the total authorized requirement for on-hand inventory subsequent to a L-O-T buy for items that will no longer be procured. The objective will be reduced as assets are attrited so that the requirements will never exceed the assets. C2.4.2.3.6. Line 22 - Repair Cycle Level Total [Repair Cycle Level]. Line 22 shows, for reparable items only, the total quantity of an item's requirement based on its recoverable unserviceable return rate (URR) (not to exceed its recurring demand rate) and represents the quantity of assets that should be on hand to cover the periods of retrograde, batch accumulation, transfer to maintenance, maintenance turnaround-time, and return to storage in ready-for-issue condition, as defined in Chapter 3 of reference (c). C2.4.2.3.6.1. Line 22a - In Maintenance and Return (M to A) [In Maint./Return.]. Line 22a shows the quantity representing the average time between the date an unserviceable asset is received by the depot maintenance activity (organic, contractor, or inter-Service) and recorded as "in work" (Condition Code M) on the ICP records and the date it is recorded as serviceable on the same record. Awaiting parts time is not to be included on this line. C2.4.2.3.6.2. Line 22b - Accumulation and Transfer [Accum./Transfer]. Line 22b shows the quantity representing the average time between the start date required to accumulate a batch of unserviceable assets and the date of induction of that batch into the depot or contractor maintenance facility. C2.4.2.3.6.3. Line 22c - Retrograde Time [Retrograde]. Line 22c shows the quantity representing the average time between the date that an unserviceable item is determined to be beyond the repair capability of an intermediate maintenance activity and the date it is recorded as unserviceable on the ICP records. C2.4.2.3.7. Line 23 - Production Lead Time Level [PLT Level]. Line 23 shows the total Production Lead Time (PLT) level. The PLT level is the sum of an item's recurring issues (minus applicable recoverable unserviceable returns for reparables) and any nonrecurring requirement during the PLT; i.e., the interval from the award of a representative buy contract until the first quantity on that contract is received and recorded on the ICP's records. Line 23 is the sum of lines 23a through 23d for columns B through K. C2.4.2.3.7.1. Line 23a - Recurring [Recurring]. Line 23a shows the portion of the PLT requirement that represents the stocked demand based demands less returns requirement. C2.4.2.3.7.2. Line 23b - Life-Of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 2b shows the portion of the PLT requirement that represents the L-O-T requirement. C2.4.2.3.7.3. Line 23c - Initial Spares [Initial Spares]. Line 23c shows the portion of the PLT requirement that represents the initial spares requirement. C2.4.2.3.7.4. Line 23d - FMS Non-CLSSA [FMS (Non-CLSSA)]. Line 23d shows the portion of the PLT requirement that represents the FMS non-CLSSA requirements. C2.4.2.3.8. Line 24 - Administrative Lead Time Level [ALT Level]. Line 24 shows the total Administrative Lead Time (ALT) level. The ALT level is the sum of an item's recurring demands (minus applicable recoverable unserviceable returns for reparables) and any nonrecurring requirement during the ALT; i.e., that interval between the initiation of a procurement request for a representative buy and the time the contract is awarded (contract effective date). It is based on current requirement computations. The ALT level represents requirements that should have been placed on procurement requests and should not yet be awarded. Line 24 is the sum of lines 24a through 24e for columns B through K. C2.4.2.3.8.1. Line 24a - Recurring [Recurring]. Line 24a shows the portion of the ALT requirement that represents the net recurring demands less returns requirement. C2.4.2.3.8.2. Line 24b - Life-Of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 24b shows the portion of the ALT requirement that represents L-O-T requirements. C2.4.2.3.8.3. Line 24c - Initial Spare [Initial Spares]. Line 24c shows the portion of the ALT requirement that represents the initial spares requirement. C2.4.2.3.8.4. Line 24d - FMS (Non-CLSSA) [FMS (Non-CLSSA)]. Line 24d shows the portion of the ALT requirement that represents FMS (non-CLSSA) program requirements. C2.4.2.3.9. Line 25 - Procurement/Economic Order Quantity Level [Procurement/EOQ Level]. Line 25 shows the total procurement or EOQ level. The EOQ level is the sum of an item's recurring demand (minus recoverable unserviceable returns for reparables) and any nonrecurring issues (except insurance items) required during the interval between procurement actions or the unfunded requirement of a L-O-T buy. This line will also be used to reflect the procurement level for those secondary items whose requirements are computed under other approved requirements determination methods such as readiness based sparing. Line 25 is the sum of lines 25a through 25e for columns B through L. C2.4.2.3.9.1. Line 25a - Economic order Quantity [EOQ Level]. Line 25a shows the portion of the EOQ requirement for projected stocked demand-based replenishment demands less returns that is based on DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3 (reference (c)) or other approved requirements determination methods such as readiness-based sparing. C2.4.2.3.9.2. Line 25b - Procurement Level [Procurement Level]. Line 25b shows the portion of the requirement for projected stocked replenishment demands calculated by other approved requirement methods, such as readiness based sparing models, simulated to occur during the computation period. C2.4.2.3.9.3. Line 25c - Life-of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 25c shows the portion of the buy requirement that represents L-O-T buy requirements that have not been funded nor has the procurement been initiated. C2.4.2.3.9.4. Line 25d - Initial Spares [Initial Spares]. Line 25d shows the portion of the buy requirement that represents initial spares requirements that are projected for the interval between procurements. C2.4.2.3.9.5. Line 25e - Foreign Military Sale (non-CLSSA) [FMS (non-CLSSA)]. Line 25e shows the portion of the buy requirement that represents other nonrecurring requirements that are projected for the interval between procurements. C2.4.2.3.10. Line 26 - Wholesale Requirement Objective [Wholesale Rqmts Obj]. Line 26 is the sum of Lines 19 through 25 for columns B through K. It is also the sum of lines 26a through g. C2.4.2.3.10.1. Line 26a - Safety Level [Safety Level]. Line 26a is the same as line 19. C2.4.2.3.10.2. Line 26b - Repair Cycle [Repair Cycle]. Line 26b is the same as line 22. C2.4.2.3.10.3. Line 26c - Recurring [Recurring]. Line 26c is the sum of lines 17a, 18a, 23a, 24a, 25a and 25b. C2.4.2.3.10.4. Line 26d - Insurance [Insurance]. Line 26d is the sum of line 17b, 18b, and 20. C2.4.2.3.10.5. Line 26e - Life-of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 26e is the sum of lines 17c, 18c, 21, 23b, 24b, and 25c. C2.4.2.3.10.6. Line 26f - Initial Spares [Initial Spares]. Line 26f is the sum of lines17d, 18d, 23c, 24c, and 25d. C2.4.2.3.10.7. Line 26g - Planned Programs [Planned Program]. Line 26g is the sum of lines 17e and 18e. C2.4.2.3.10.8. Line 26h - FMS (Non-CLSSA) [FMS (Non-CLSSA)]. Line 26h is the sum of lines 17f, 18f, 23d, 24d, and 25e. C2.4.2.3.11. Line 27 - Total Requirement Objective (Total Rqmts Obj]. Line 27 is the sum of lines 6, 15, and 26 for columns B through K. C2.4.2.3.12. Line 28 - Assets Beyond Requirement Objective [Assets Byd. RO]. Line 28 is the difference between line 5 and line 27 (line 5 minus line 27) for columns C through J. C2.5. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR LINE and/or COLUMN CELLS C2.5.1. Line 8a, Column A. This cell contains the customer wait time goal expressed as percentage (no decimals). C2.5.2. Line 8b, Column A. This cell contains the weapon system operational readiness goals expressed as a percentage (no decimals). C2.5.3. Line 12, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average repair cycle time in days. C2.5.4. Line 13, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average order and/or ship time in days for items in stock at the wholesale level of supply. C2.5.5. Line 14, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average operating level in days based on the average value of one day of demand. C2.5.6. Line 18, Column A for MATRICES I(B) through I(D). This cell contains the value of the total demands forecast from the date of cutoff to the end of the FY. C2.5.6.1. Line 18a, Column A for MATRICES I(B) through I(D). This cell contains the value of the total recurring demands (includes CLSSA) forecast from the date of cutoff to the end of the FY. C2.5.6.2. Line 18b, Column A for MATRICES I(B) through I(D). This cell contains the value of the total L-O-T demands forecast from the date of cutoff to the end of the FY. C2.5.6.3. Line 18c, Column A for MATRICES I(B) through I(D). This cell contains the value of the total initial spares demands forecast from the date of cutoff to the end of the FY. C2.5.6.4. Line 18d, Column A for MATRICES I(B) through I(D). This cell contains the value of the total planned program demands forecast from the date of cutoff to the end of the FY. C2.5.6.5. Line 18e, Column A for MATRICES I(B) through I(D). This cell contains the value of the total FMS Non-CLSSA demands forecast from the date of cutoff to the end of the FY. C2.5.7. Line 19a, Column A. This cell contains the customer wait time goals expressed as a percentage (no decimals). C2.5.8. Line 19b, Column A. This cell contains the weapon system operational readiness goals expressed as a percentage (no decimals). C2.5.9. Line 22, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average number days in the total repair cycle. C2.5.10. Line 22a, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average number of days of maintenance turnaround and return time. C2.5.11. Line 22b, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average number of days of accumulation and transfer time. C2.5.12. Line 22c, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average number of days of retrograde time. C2.5.13. Line 23, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average number of days from the date of award of a contract until the first delivery. C2.5.14. Line 24, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average number of days from the date that the reorder point or buy position is reached until the award of the contract. C2.5.15. Line 25a, Column A. This cell contains the dollar-weighted average number of days between procurements based on the EOQ or buy quantity (excluding L-O-T buys). C2.5.16. Line 29, Column A - Item Counts [NSNs w/Rqmts & Assets]. Line 29 shows the total number of NSNs included in matrix with both requirements and assets. C2.5.17. Line 30, Column A - Item Counts [NSNs w/Requirements Only]. Line 30 shows the total number of NSNs included in the matrix with requirements and no assets. C2.5.18. Line 31, Column A - Item Counts [NSNs w/Assets Only]. Line 31 shows the total number of NSNs included in the matrix with assets and no requirements. C2.5.19. Line 32, Column A for MATRIX I(A) Only - Past Actual Demand/Usage Data [PAST Demand/Usage Data]. Line 32 shows the total actual historical demand or usage data as of the cutoff date. For the March 31 cutoff, demands will be for the prior 6 months of the CY. For the September 30 cutoff, it will equal the full 12 months before CY. C2.5.19.1. Line 32a, Column A for MATRIX I(A) Only - Recurring Demands [Recurring]. Line 32a shows the portion of the total demands that represents the recurring demands (including CLSSA). C2.5.19.2. Line 32b, Column A for MATRIX I(A) Only - Insurance [Insurance]. Line 32b shows the portion of the total demands that represents insurance. C2.5.19.3. Line 32c, Column A for MATRIX I(A) Only - Life-of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 32c shows the portion of the total demands that represents L-O-T demands. C2.5.19.4. Line 32d, Column A for MATRIX I(A) Only - Initial Spares [Initial Spares]. Line 32d shows the portion of the total demands that represents initial spares demands. C2.5.19.5. Line 32e, Column A for MATRIX I(A) Only - Planned Program [Planned Program]. Line 32e shows the portion of the total demands that represents planned program demands. C2.5.20. Line 32, Column B for MATRIX i(D) Only - Due Out End of Budget Year [Due Out, End BY]. Line 32 shows the due out position simulated to exist at the end of the BY. C2.6. MATRIX I EXAMPLES C2.6.1. The following tables contain an example of each of the matrices described in this chapter. C2.6.2. The codes for the matrices are as follows: M Mandatory entry X Mandatory entry once the data is available in the automated systems. Until that time, this is an optional entry. C3. CHAPTER 3 MATRIX II - REPAIR PROGRAM C3.1. INTRODUCTION C3.1.1. The following description and requirement elements apply to the stratification display for repair programs. The Opening Position, Matrix II(A), provides a snapshot of the requirements, assets, and deficits for secondary items recorded in the ICP's item record file as of the cutoff date (i.e., as of the close of business on the last day of each quarter). Matrices II(B) through II(D) simulate the requirements, assets, and deficits as of the end of the CY, AY, and BY years. The CY always starts at the beginning of the first quarter after the cutoff. C3.1.2. Column A (Memo) displays days of RLT and induction cycle for individual items, and a dollar-weighted average of all items in the summary matrix. The deficits to the repair requirements are computed on a individual item quantitative basis and displayed in Matrix II at both the standard price, Column J, and the average repair and/or overhaul cost, Column K. C3.1.3. The simulation process for the repair program is similar to that for the procurement program. The requirement elements differ with the elimination of the repair cycle level and the substitution of the RLT level for the PLT and ALT levels. The RLT level is based on total demands to maximize the repair potential. The induction cycle level replaces the Procurement/EOQ level. The induction cycle or frequency represents the normal planned interval between the induction of batches of unserviceable assets into the maintenance operations. The induction cycle duration is based on the maximum induction batch size and the unserviceable asset generation rate. (See DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3 (reference (c)).) The RLT determines availability of serviceable assets based on the induction date. The assets differ from the procurement simulation by displaying only the receipts from procurement within the RLT and eliminating the procurement on-order assets. Beyond date of last induction replaces beyond date of last buy. The repair deficit is constrained by the availability of unserviceable assets in columns H and I. The remainder of this chapter describes the headings, the columnar, the line-item entries, and special instructions for selected cells. In the descriptions presented here, the abbreviated title to appear in the data submission is shown in brackets. C3.2. REPORT HEADINGS C3.2.1. Matrix II(A) - Opening Position. Matrix II(A) shows the actual requirements and assets as of the cutoff date and does not include any forecasts or simulations. It includes a memorandum entry of past actual unserviceable return data. The heading is as follows: SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION FUNDING CATEGORY____________ - OPENING MATRIX II(A) - REPAIR PROGRAM - FY___ As of____________ ___, 19___ (dollars in thousands) C3.2.2. Matrix II(B) - Current Year. Matrix II(B) shows the requirements and assets projected for the months remaining in the first simulation period. That period represents a full 12 months for the September cutoff and 6 months for the 31 March cutoff. The due out and insurance requirements displayed in Column B, Requirements, are the same as those reflected in Matrix II(A). All other requirements are simulated as of the date of last induction or end of the year for items not in a repair position. Unserviceable returns for the CY will represent recorded due ins as of the cutoff and/or forecast of unserviceable returns based on current computations. All other assets are as of the cutoff. Matrix II(B) includes "unserviceable returns beyond the date of last induction" under assets and "demands" under requirements in addition to the breakouts reflected in Matrix II(A). The heading to be used is as follows: SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION FUNDING CATEGORY____________ - TOTAL CY MATRIX II(B) - REPAIR PROGRAM - FY___ As of____________ ___, 19___ (dollars in thousands) C3.2.3. Matrix II (C) - Apportionment Year. Matrix II(C) shows the requirements and assets projected for the full 12 months of the AY. The due out and insurance requirements displayed in Column B, Requirements, are the same as those simulated to exist at the end of the CY. All other requirements are simulated as of the date of last induction or end of the period for items not in a repair position. Unserviceable returns are the forecast of returns projected to be received during the period. All other assets are those simulated to exist at the end of CY. The heading to be used is as follows: SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION FUNDING CATEGORY____________ - TOTAL AY MATRIX II(C) - REPAIR PROGRAM - FY___ As of____________ ___, 19___ (dollars in thousands) C3.2.4. Matrix II (D) - Budget Year. Matrix II(D) shows the requirements and assets projected for the full 12 months in the BY. The due out and insurance requirements displayed in column B, Requirements, are the same as those simulated to exist at the end of the AY. All other requirements are simulated as of the date of last induction or end of the BY for items not in a repair position. Unserviceable returns are the forecast of returns projected to be received during BY. All other assets are those simulated to exist at the end of AY. The heading to be used is as follows: SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATION FUNDING CATEGORY____________ - TOTAL BY MATRIX II(D) - REPAIR PROGRAM - FY___ As of____________ ___, 19___ (dollars in thousands) C3.3. COLUMNAR ENTRIES C3.3.1. Column A - Memorandum [Memo]. Column A provides information about the requirement defined in the numbered line entry (e.g., the number of days of demand represented by the requirement element or the duration of the lead time). The requirements for memorandum entries are specified in section C3.6. C3.3.2. Column B - Requirements [Require / ments]. Column B shows the quantitative requirement for the element defined in the line entry as of the cutoff for Matrix II(A) or as of the date of the last induction or the end of the FY if no induction occurs for Matrices II(B) through II(D). C3.3.3. Column C - Retail Assets [Retail / Assets]. Column C shows the serviceable and unserviceable on-hand assets and the assets in transit (due in) from the wholesale level of supply as of the end of the period. This column is the same as column C in Matrix I. WHOLESALE ASSETS (COLUMNS D THROUGH I) C3.3.4. Column D - Serviceable On-Hand-Assets [Serv. / On-Hand]. Column D shows the serviceable assets on hand at the wholesale level of supply in Condition Codes A, B, C, or D and Condition Code J, K, L, or O assets not exempted by Table C1.T3. as of the end of the period. This column is the same as column D in Matrix I. C3.3.5. Column E - Due In Other [Due In / other]. Column E shows the serviceable due-in assets (same condition codes as in column D) to the wholesale level of supply from sources other than procurement or maintenance as of the end of the period. This element will include all assets due in from field returns; disassembly of sets, kits and outfits; fabrication of items; and return of loans. This column is the same as column E in Matrix I. C3.3.6. Column F - Procurement Receipts within Repair Lead Time [Proc. Recpt / W/in RLT]. This column shows that portion of the assets on order in columns I and K of Matrix I that are expected to be received during the repair lead time. C3.3.7. Column G - Unserviceable On-Hand: Inducted [Unser. On Hand: / Inducted]. Column G shows the quantities of unserviceable assets on hand that are recorded in the accountable records in Condition Code M (includes Condition Code G if funds have been obligated) and those quantities due-in from contractor maintenance as of the end of the period. This column is the same as column F in Matrix I. C3.3.8. Column H - Unserviceable On Hand: Not Inducted [Unserv. On Hand: / Not Ind.]. Column H shows the quantity of unserviceable assets on hand in Condition Code F (includes Condition Code G if funds have not been obligated) as of the end of the period. This column is the same as column G in Matrix I. C3.3.9. Column I - Unserviceable Returns [Unserv. / Returns]. Column I shows the firm due-in assets (intransit) as of the cutoff for the opening position or the unserviceable returns forecast to be received in the FY. This column is the same as column H in Matrix I. WHOLESALE REPAIR DEFICITS C3.3.10. Column J - Deficit at Standard Price [Deficit: / Standard]. Column I shows the item quantity deficit to the repair requirement (the sum of column H and column I) multiplied by the standard price for the item. C3.3.11. Column X - Deficit at Repair Cost [Deficit: / Repr Cost]. Column K shows the item quantity deficit to the repair requirement (the sum of column H and column I) multiplied by the average repair and/or overhaul cost for the item. C3.4. LINE ENTRIES C3.4.1. Assets C3.4.1.1. Line 1 - Gross Assets, Stratification Cutoff [Gross Assets]. Line 1 shows all assets on hand and expected to be received within the RLT from all sources that are owned by the reporting DoD Component and under the control of the wholesale inventory manager as projected at the cutoff date for Matrix II(A) or at the end of the fiscal year simulation for Matrices II(B) through II(D). Column H will contain the total anticipated unserviceable returns for the next FY. C3.4.1.2. Line 2 - Exempt Assets [Exemptions]. Line 2 shows those gross assets that are not applicable to requirements in the stratification process based on DoD policy. (See section C1.6.) C3.4.1.3. Line 3 - Forecast of Condemnations [Condemnations]. Line 3 applies only to reparable unserviceable assets on hand (columns F and G) and due in (column H). This element displays the value of the unserviceable reparables that are expected to be condemned during the overhaul/repair process. Assets discounted on this line will not be stratified to any other element. (See section C1.6.) C3.4.1.4. Line 4 - Forecast of Unserviceable Returns Beyond Date of Last Induction (DLI) [Beyond DLI]. Line 4 applies only to unserviceable returns (column H) in Matrices II(B) through II(D). This element displays the value of the recoverable unserviceable returns that are forecast to arrive subsequent to the last induction for the year. if there is no induction during the period, this entry will be blank. (See section C1.6.) C3.4.1.5. Line 5 - Net Available Assets (for stratification) [Net Assets]. Line 5 is the difference between the gross assets on Line 1 and the excluded assets on Lines 2, 3, and 4 (line 1 minus the sum of lines 2, 3, and 4). C3.4.2. Requirements C3.4.2.1. War Reserve Requirements C3.4.2.1.1. Line 6 - War Reserve Requirement [War Reserves]. Line 6 is the war reserve requirement that must be reserved at the retail activities or at the wholesale depot prior to hostilities. It is the total of the retail and wholesale war reserve, line 6a plus 6b. C3.4.2.1.1.1. Line 6a - Retail Protected War Reserve [Retail Protected]. Line 6a shows the portion of the war reserve that is stored at the retail activities. This requirement includes items with Reason for Stockage Code (RSC) SW, as defined in DoD 4140.1-R, Chapter 3 (reference (c)). (See DoD Directive 3110.6 (reference (a)) and this Manual, Chapter 1, paragraph C1.5.4., for details.) C3.4.2.1.1.2. Line 6b - Wholesale War Reserve [Wholesale]. Line 6b shows the war reserves at the wholesale level. It is the sum of lines 6b(1) and 6b(2). C3.4.2.1.1.2.1. Line 6b(1) - Protected War Reserves [Protected]. Line 6b(1) shows that portion of the war reserve assets that are protected for emergency use in the year of simulation. C3.4.2.1.1.2.2. Line 6b(2) - Non-Protected War Reserves [Non-Protected]. Line 6b(2) shows that portion of the war reserve materiel requirement (WRMR) for which funding has not been approved and assets are not protected in the year of simulation. C3.4.2.2. Retail Requirements: Line 7 - Retail Peacetime Requisitioning Objective [Requisitioning Objective]. Line 7 is the sum of lines 7 through 14 of Matrix I. C3.4.2.3. Wholesale Requirements C3.4.2.3.1. Line 8 - Dues Out [Dues Out]. Line 8 shows the total quantity due out. This entry is the same as that on line 17 of Matrix I. C3.4.2.3.2. Line 9 - Total Demands, Fiscal Year - (Forecast of Demands) [Total Demands]. Lines 9 and 9a-9f are used for Matrices II(B) through II(D); they are not used in Matrix II(A). Line 9 shows the estimated demand for the issue of items (exclusive of those shown as a due out) from the beginning of the fiscal year to the date of the last induction or the end of the fiscal year for items without an induction. C3.4.2.3.2.1. Line 9a - Recurring Demand-Based [Recurring]. Line 9a shows the portion of the forecast of total demands that represents recurring demands. C3.4.2.3.2.2. Line 9b - Life-of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 9b shows the portion of the forecast of total demands for the period that represents L-O-T demands. C3.4.2.3.2.3. Line 9c - Initial Spares [Initial Spares]. Line 9c shows the portion of the forecast of total demands for the period that represents initial spares demands. C3.4.2.3.2.4. Line 9d - Planned Programs [Planned Programs]. Line 9d shows the portion of the forecast of total demands for the period that represents planned program demands. C3.4.2.3.2.5. Line 9e - FMS Non-CLSSA [FMS Non-CLSSA]. Line 9e shows the portion of the forecast of total demands for the period that represents other nonrecurring demands. C3.4.2.3.3. Line 10 - Safety Level [Safety Level]. Line 10 shows the quantity of an item that is required to ensure continued operations in the event of fluctuation of demands or lead times. This entry is the same as that on line 20 of Matrix I. C3.4.2.3.4. Line 11 - Insurance Objective [Insurance Objective]. Line 11 shows the maximum on-hand and on-order inventory authorized for items coded as insurance (DoD 4140.1- R, Chapter 3 (reference (c))). This entry is the same as that on line 20 of Matrix I. C3.4.2.3.5. Line 12 - Life-Of-Type On-Hand Objective [L-O-T Objective]. Line 12 shows the total authorized requirement for on-hand inventory subsequent to a L-O-T buy for items that will no longer be procured. The objective will be reduced as assets are attrited so that the requirements will never exceed the assets. The entry is the same as that on line 21 of Matrix I. C3.4.2.3.6. Line 13 - Repair Lead Time Level [Total Repair Lead Time]. Line 13 shows, for reparable items only, the full repair lead time level as of the cutoff date. The quantity is based on the total demands forecast to occur from the time assets are inducted into a depot maintenance activity (organic, inter-Service, or contractor) until they are repaired and recorded ready-for-issue (RFI) on the ICP's record; i.e., transfer to maintenance, maintenance turnaround-time, and transfer from maintenance time as defined in DoD 4140.1-R, Appendix E (reference (c)). Note: The RLT Level is not the same as the Repair Cycle Level in Matrix I. C3.4.2.3.6.1. Line 14a - Recurring [Recurring]. Line 14a shows the portion of the RLT level that represents the total recurring demands. C3.4.2.3.6.2. Line 13b - Life-of-Type [L-O-T]. Line 13b shows the portion of the RLT level that represents the total L-O-T demand. C3.4.2.3.6.3. Line 13c - Initial Spares [initial Spares]. Line 13c shows the portion of the RLT level that represents initial spares. C3.4.2.3.6.4. Line 13d - Planned Programs [Planned Programs]. Line 13d shows the portion of the RLT level that represents planned program issues. C3.4.2.3.6.5. Line 13e - FMS Non-CLSSA [FMS Non-CLSSA]. Line 13e shows the portion of the RLT level that represents FMS non-CLSSA issues. C3.4.2.3.7. Line 14 - Induction Cycle-Level [Induct Cycle Level]. Line 14 shows the induction cycle level. The induction cycle or frequency represents the normal planned interval between the induction of batches of unserviceable assets into maintenance. The induction cycle is based on the authorized batch size and accumulation time. (See DoD 4140.1-R, Appendix E (reference (c))). The induction cycle level is the number of unserviceable returns on hand and/or anticipated during the cycle. If no inductions occur during the period, this entry is blank. C3.4.2.3.8. Line 15 - Wholesale Repair Requirement Objective/Applied Assets/Deficit [Wholesale Repair Rqmt]. Line 15 is the sum of lines 6b and 8 through 14 for columns B through K. C3.4.2.3.9. Line 16 - Total Repair Requirements [Total Repair Rqmts]. Line 16 is the sum of line 6a plus line 15. C3.4.2.3.10. Line 17 - Assets Beyond Repair Requirement Objective [Assets Beyond Rep RO]. Line 17 is the difference between line 5 and line 16 for columns B through I. C3.5. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR LINE AND/OR COLUMN CELLS C3.5.1. Line 3, Columns G, E, and I. These cells contain the value of the unserviceable reparable assets that are expected to be condemned based on the current washout rates. Those rates are reduced for application to assets inducted into maintenance (column G). (See section C1.6. on Reparable Assets for detailed instructions.) C3.5.2. Line 4, Column I FOR MATRICES II(B) THROUGH II(D) ONLY. This cell contains the value of recoverable unserviceable reparable assets that are expected to be received subsequent to the last induction for the year. If no inductions occur, this cell is blank. C3.5.3. Line 14, Column A. This cell contains the computed days for items; for summaries, it contains the dollar-weighted number of days of supply the total RLT level represents based on the average value of 1 day of the total demand. C3.5.4. Line 15, Column A. This cell contains the computed days for items; for summaries, it contains the dollar-weighted number of days of supply the induction cycle represents based on the average value of 1 day of unserviceable returns. C3.5.5. Line 18, Column A - Item Counts [NSNO w/Rqmts & Assets]. Line 18 shows the total number of NSNs included in matrix with both requirements and assets. C3.5.6. Line 19, Column A - Item Counts [NSNs w/Rqmts only]. Line 19 shows the total number of NSNs included in the matrix with requirements and no assets. C3.5.7. Line 20, Column A - Item Counts [NSNs w/Assets only]. Line 20 shows the total number of NSNs included in the matrix with assets and no requirements. C3.5.8. Line 21 FOR MATRIX II(A) ONLY - Past Actual Unserviceable Returns [Total Unserviceable, Returns]. Line 21, column A, shows the total actual historical unserviceable returns as of the cutoff date. For the March 31 cutoff, it will equal the first 6 months of the CY. For the September 30 cutoff, it will equal the full 12 months of the year before the CY. C3.6. MATRIX II EXAMPLES C3.6.1. The following four tables contain an example of each of the matrices described in this chapter. C3.6.2. The codes for the matrices are as follows: M Mandatory entry X Mandatory entry once the data is available in the automated systems. Until that time, this is an optional entry. C4. CHAPTER 4 MATRIX III - READINESS STATUS C4.1. INTRODUCTION C4.1.1. This chapter presents descriptions and requirement elements for the stratification display of readiness status and analysis. Matrix III establishes a gross measurement of the retail and wholesale supply systems capability to satisfy logistic requirements as of a point in time by measuring asset availability against on-hand requirement elements. it provides a snapshot of the requirements, assets, and deficits for secondary items recorded as of the cutoff date (i.e., as of the close of business on the last day of each quarter). C4.1.2. This matrix displays those requirements for assets required to be on hand and ready-for-issue (RFI) as of the stratification cutoff date. Assets in the pipelines and leadtimes are not included. It shows the minimum desired on-hand and maximum authorized stock on-hand requirements for both the retail and wholesale levels. It also shows the required readiness status by including the War Reserve requirements. To the degree that the matrix shows a deficit to the minimum on-hand objective, the serviceable on-hand asets are considered inadequate. To the degree that the serviceable on-hand assets are greater than the operating level and/or procurement cycle requirement, the assets are considered excessive. C4.1.3. The requirements elements are grouped into war reserves and peacetime requirements, with retail and wholesale subgroups. The requirement elements are listed in priority sequence. For DoD Component activities that do not have visibility of the retail level of supply, only the elements that are applicable to the wholesale level are displayed and the retail elements are left blank. The same procedure applies for the individual breakout of the various wholesale levels until such time as the activity has visibility of those elements. C4.1.4. A description follows of the report heading, columnar entries and line-item entries. The abbreviated title to appear in the data submission is shown in brackets. C4.2. REPORT HEADING >brk>SECONDARY ITEM STRATIFICATI