Enter Process Inputs
Example Data Table
| Metric | Sample Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shift Length | 480 min | Total scheduled production time. |
| Break + Changeover | 65 min | Non-productive but planned time. |
| Demand | 320 units | Required output for the shift. |
| Observed Cycle | 52 sec/unit | Measured processing pace at the line. |
| Uptime / Performance / FPY | 92% / 95% / 98% | Loss multipliers affecting real flow. |
| WIP / Waiting | 110 units / 18 min | Used for lead time and efficiency estimates. |
Formula Used
1) Available Production Time
Available Time = Shift Length − Break Time − Changeover Time
2) Takt Time
Takt Time = Available Production Time in Seconds ÷ Customer Demand
3) Flow Factor
Flow Factor = Uptime × Performance × First Pass Yield
4) Effective Cycle Time
Effective Cycle Time = Observed Cycle Time ÷ Flow Factor
5) Throughput and Capacity
Throughput per Hour = (3600 ÷ Effective Cycle Time) × Parallel Stations
Capacity per Shift = (Available Time in Seconds ÷ Effective Cycle Time) × Parallel Stations
6) Estimated Lead Time and Flow Efficiency
Lead Time = Waiting Time + [WIP ÷ (Throughput per Minute)]
Flow Efficiency = Value-Added Time ÷ Lead Time × 100
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the full shift length in minutes.
- Add all planned breaks and changeover time.
- Enter required units for the shift as demand.
- Use the measured cycle time from real process observation.
- Add uptime, performance, and first pass yield percentages.
- Enter current WIP, average waiting time, station count, and operators.
- Click Analyze Flow to view capacity, flow efficiency, lead time, and gap analysis.
- Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save the result for reporting.
FAQs
1) What does this calculator measure?
It evaluates whether your process can maintain continuous flow by comparing demand pace, effective cycle time, capacity, WIP pressure, and estimated lead time.
2) Why is takt time important?
Takt time shows the pace needed to satisfy demand. If your effective cycle time is slower than takt, backlog or missed output becomes likely.
3) Why use effective cycle time instead of observed cycle time?
Observed cycle time shows raw pace. Effective cycle time adjusts for uptime, performance losses, and quality loss, so it better reflects what the line can truly deliver.
4) What does flow efficiency tell me?
Flow efficiency compares value-added time against total lead time. Low values usually mean material spends more time waiting than being processed.
5) How does WIP affect the result?
Higher WIP usually increases lead time and hides problems. It may protect output temporarily, but it often slows learning and delays issue detection.
6) What is a healthy flow status?
A healthy status usually means effective cycle time stays below takt, utilization is not overstretched, and flow efficiency is reasonable for the process.
7) Can I use this for office or digital workflows?
Yes. Replace physical units with tasks, requests, tickets, or documents. The same logic works for queues, waiting time, productivity loss, and delivery pace.
8) What should I improve first if results look weak?
Start with the largest visible constraint: downtime, slow cycle time, poor yield, long waiting, or excess WIP. Small targeted fixes usually improve flow faster than broad changes.