Calculator Inputs
The page stays single-column overall. The calculator inputs switch to 3 columns on large screens, 2 on medium screens, and 1 on mobile.
Example Data Table
| Asset | Period (h) | Preventive (h) | Corrective (h) | Logistics (h) | Administrative (h) | Failures | Operational Availability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compressor Train A | 720 | 18 | 22 | 10 | 6 | 4 | 92.22% |
| Generator Set B | 720 | 12 | 15 | 8 | 5 | 3 | 94.44% |
| Pump Skid C | 168 | 4 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 91.67% |
Use the table as a quick validation reference for your own entries.
Formula Used
Uptime = Total Observation Period − (Preventive + Corrective + Logistics + Administrative Downtime)
Ao = Uptime ÷ Total Observation Period × 100
Unavailability = 100 − Ao
Maintenance Burden = (Preventive + Corrective Downtime) ÷ Total Observation Period × 100
Support Delay Ratio = (Logistics + Administrative Delay) ÷ Total Observation Period × 100
MTBF = Uptime ÷ Failure Count
MTTR = Corrective Downtime ÷ Failure Count
Failure Rate = Failure Count ÷ Uptime
Operational availability is broader than inherent availability because it counts real support delays, not only repair work.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the asset or system name for the report.
- Set the total observation period in hours.
- Enter preventive, corrective, logistics, and administrative downtime values for the same period.
- Add the observed failure count if you want MTBF, MTTR, and failure rate.
- Enter mission hours required to compare available time against demand.
- Set a target availability to measure compliance and downtime margin.
- Press Calculate Availability to show results above the form.
- Use the CSV or PDF buttons to export the summary.
FAQs
1) What does operational availability measure?
Operational availability measures the fraction of total observed time an asset remains ready for service. It includes maintenance, logistics, and administrative delays, so it reflects field readiness rather than ideal workshop conditions.
2) How is it different from inherent availability?
Inherent availability usually focuses on failure and repair only. Operational availability is wider because it also counts waiting, supply, transport, approvals, staffing delays, and other real support losses.
3) Why should preventive downtime be included?
Planned maintenance still removes the asset from service during the measured period. Including it helps planners balance reliability improvement against the service time sacrificed to inspections, calibration, overhaul, or scheduled replacement.
4) What period should I enter?
Use the full window you want to evaluate, such as a week, month, quarter, test campaign, or operating contract period. Every downtime value entered should belong to that same exact observation window.
5) What if downtime is larger than the total period?
That means the inputs are inconsistent. The total period may be too short, downtime categories may overlap, or a value may be incorrect. The calculator stops and asks for corrected numbers before reporting results.
6) Why is the target availability field useful?
A target adds planning context. It shows whether current downtime is acceptable, how much extra downtime remains before missing the goal, or how many hours must be removed to regain compliance.
7) Does failure count change the availability result?
Availability itself depends on uptime and downtime. Failure count does not directly change Ao, but it enables MTBF, MTTR, failure rate, and downtime-per-failure measures that explain the observed result.
8) Can I use this calculator for a fleet?
Yes. You can enter aggregated fleet totals for a quick overview, or evaluate each asset separately and compare outputs. Separate analysis is usually better when duty cycles or support conditions differ.