Enter Production Inputs
All time inputs use the same selected unit. The layout shows three columns on large screens, two on medium screens, and one on mobile.
Example Data Table
This sample table shows how average cycle time can be compared across production batches.
| Batch | Shift Length (min) | Breaks (min) | Setup (min) | Downtime (min) | Rework + Inspection (min) | Total Units | Good Units | Gross Avg Cycle (min/unit) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 480 | 30 | 20 | 15 | 15 | 180 | 175 | 2.5833 |
| B | 420 | 20 | 15 | 10 | 14 | 150 | 146 | 2.7600 |
| C | 600 | 40 | 30 | 20 | 20 | 220 | 214 | 2.6364 |
Formula Used
Shift Length − Planned Breaks
Available Production Time + Rework Time + Inspection Time
Total Manufacturing Time Used ÷ Total Units Produced
(Available Production Time − Setup Time − Unplanned Downtime) ÷ Total Units Produced
Total Manufacturing Time Used ÷ Good Units
Total Units Produced ÷ Net Run Time in Hours
Net Run Time ÷ Available Production Time × 100
Available Production Time ÷ Customer Demand
This calculator shows multiple cycle views because manufacturing teams often need both elapsed and loss-adjusted measures. The gross measure reflects the full production context. The net measure isolates run performance. The good-unit measure highlights quality drag.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the total shift length for the batch, line, or shift.
- Add planned breaks, setup time, unplanned downtime, rework time, and inspection time.
- Enter total units produced and the number of good units.
- Set parallel stations if multiple stations work simultaneously on the same flow.
- Optionally add an ideal cycle time and customer demand to compare efficiency and takt.
- Choose the time unit used across all fields.
- Press the calculate button to show results above the form.
- Review the table, graph, and exports to compare performance, losses, and capacity.
FAQs
1. What is average cycle time in manufacturing?
Average cycle time is the average time required to complete one unit or one good unit during production. It helps teams understand pace, capacity, and improvement opportunities.
2. Why does this calculator show more than one cycle time?
Manufacturing decisions need different views. Gross cycle shows elapsed performance, net run cycle isolates running time, and good-unit cycle reveals the effect of scrap and rework.
3. Should setup time be included in cycle time?
It depends on the decision. Setup should be included when measuring real batch performance. It may be excluded when evaluating only steady-state run capability or machine speed.
4. What does takt gap mean?
Takt gap compares your current average cycle time with the pace required by demand. A positive gap means production is slower than demand. A negative gap means capacity exceeds demand.
5. Why are good units important?
Good units matter because shipped output creates value. If defects or scrap rise, the good-unit cycle time becomes worse even when total unit volume appears acceptable.
6. How can I reduce average cycle time?
Reduce setup, downtime, waiting, handling, inspection delays, and rework. Standard work, preventive maintenance, line balancing, and better material flow usually improve cycle performance.
7. What is the difference between throughput and cycle time?
Cycle time measures time per unit. Throughput measures units completed per time period. They are inversely related when the process is stable and measured on the same basis.
8. Can I use this calculator for cells and assembly lines?
Yes. It works for manual cells, machine lines, packaging lines, and mixed operations. Use parallel stations carefully so the station-adjusted cycle reflects your real configuration.