Zone structure and decision thresholds
The zone test groups each measurement by its distance from the center line in standard deviation units. Zone C captures routine variation inside one sigma, Zone B covers shifts between one and two sigma, and Zone A highlights rare points between two and three sigma. This structure converts raw values into comparable signals across products, shifts, and gauges, even when units differ. Consistent zones support comparisons across characteristics.
Pattern signals that matter on the floor
Single extreme points are obvious, but many process problems arrive as patterns. The rule checks focus on clusters that are unlikely under stable variation, such as two of three points beyond two sigma on the same side, or four of five beyond one sigma. These patterns align with tool wear, setup drift, material lot changes, or operator technique changes. Common rule language improves escalation consistency during daily production.
Estimating sigma for meaningful zones
Zones depend on an accurate sigma. Auto mode estimates sigma from the dataset, while Manual mode lets you apply a known historical value from a validated control plan. Sample deviation is typical for ongoing monitoring because it corrects bias in short runs, while population deviation can fit full-lot studies. If sigma is inflated by mixed conditions, zones will look calmer than reality, so keep data windows comparable.
Using zone counts for stability reviews
The counts of points in Zones C, B, A, and beyond three sigma provide a compact stability snapshot. A stable process usually produces most points in Zone C, fewer in Zone B, and very few in Zone A, with almost none beyond three sigma. When the distribution shifts toward Zone B or Zone A, review recent changes and verify measurement system performance before adjusting specifications or targets.
Traceable reporting with exports
Quality decisions improve when evidence is easy to share. The CSV export supports sorting, filtering, and attachment to nonconformance records, while the PDF export creates a consistent snapshot for audits and customer communication. Include the center line, sigma method, and rule set with each report to prevent interpretation drift. Exported tables also help you build trend libraries and train teams on signal recognition.