Finished Goods Entry
Record finished output with actual costs, scrap and quality capture.
Record finished goods output against a manufacturing order, with actual cost roll-up, scrap tracking, and quality classification.
How FG Entry actually works.
Finished goods entry is the closing voucher of a manufacturing order. Pipetal captures finished output with full cost rollup, and the FG enters inventory ready for sale.
Scrap and grade variance are captured as separate line items, so finished value reflects only sellable output.
Inside FG Entry.
Linked to MO
Pick the manufacturing order, finished item and BOM-expected output pre-fill.
Actual vs expected output
Operator enters actual; yield variance auto-computed.
Quality grades
Output split across A, B, scrap grades, with rate and cost per grade.
Auto cost rollup
Finished value = (input cost + labour + overheads) / actual output, posted automatically.
Stock posting
Finished goods enter inventory at the chosen warehouse and rack, ready for sale.
MO closure
When all expected output is recorded, the MO closes and final variance reports run.
Where FG Entry sits in the production flow.
A mill identifies a 2% yield gap on one machine and recoups 8 lac monthly.
Yield variance reports show that machine M3 consistently produces 2% less finished pipe per ton of coil than machines M1 and M2. The plant manager runs a maintenance audit, replaces a worn die, and yield on M3 jumps back to spec. On 80 tons of monthly output through M3, that is 8 lac of recovered finished value.
What buyers usually ask.
Yes, both UOM are captured and the system reconciles on conversion factors.
Each grade is a separate line on the FG entry, with its own qty, weight and rate.
Yes, MOs can be short-closed with reason; remaining expected output goes into the variance report.
Related sub-modules
See Finished Goods Entry live, on your factory data.
A 15-minute discovery call is enough. Bring your messiest workflow, your most stubborn vendor dispute, your hardest reporting question. We will show you the screen.
