Manufacturing — production orders, BOMs, and lot/serial tracking

Manufacturing is Turtini's shop-floor MES — production orders, bills of materials, station scans, and full as-built genealogy. For shops that need lot or serial traceability and an audit trail that holds up under recall or regulator review.

Core flow:
1. Define products with a bill of materials (parts + quantities + suppliers + lead times)
2. Create production orders that pull the BOM forward as a kit reservation
3. Operators scan parts at each station as they're consumed (phone camera or USB scanner)
4. Each finished good carries its as-built genealogy — every component, every operator, every timestamp

Lot vs. serial:
• Lot tracking — every unit in a production batch shares one ID. Cheaper to manage; less precise traceability.
• Serial tracking — each unit gets its own ID. Required for regulated industries and high-value goods.

Genealogy is the value:
Pull up any finished good, see exactly which lot of each component went into it. If a supplier issues a recall on lot ABC-42, run a recall trace to find every finished unit that has it — and every customer who has those units.

Regulated-industries mode:
Toggle on for AS9100 (aerospace), ISO 13485 (medical devices), or any other regime that requires hash-chained electronic signatures. Each station scan adds a tamper-evident hash; deviations from the BOM require a documented sign-off; the chain is audit-exportable.

Where Manufacturing connects to the rest of Turtini:
• Orders ship as Quotes/Invoices (Accounting auto-posts revenue)
• Inventory depletes as production orders consume kit
• Receiving scans tie back to Purchase Orders if your org has Purchasing enabled
• Wally tools surface "running low on part X" before a stockout halts the line