Turn time, count, and loss data into a practical OEE view with Availability, Performance, Quality,
a Six Big Losses Pareto, projected-gain simulation, and saved-run history.
Analyzer
Enter the current production run
Core formula: OEE = Availability x Performance x Quality
Use one line per loss category as `Category, value`. The standard Six Big Losses labels work best.
Enter minutes for downtime and speed losses. Enter rejected units for the two reject categories; the app converts them to ideal-time minutes for Pareto ranking.
Pareto
Six Big Losses ranking
Rank
Loss
Value
Share
Cumulative
1
Breakdowns
28
28.0%
28.0%
Trend
Saved run history
Saved
OEE
A
P
Q
Top Loss
No saved runs yet. Click Save Run after analyzing.
Instructions
How to use this app
Enter planned production time, ideal cycle time, total count, and good count.
List the Six Big Losses on separate lines. Use minutes for downtime and speed losses, and rejected units for the two quality-loss rows.
Click `Analyze OEE` to calculate OEE plus the Availability, Performance, and Quality components.
Use the simulator to reduce one loss category and see the projected OEE gain immediately.
Click `Save Run` to add the current result to a local trend history on this device and browser.
The simulator is directional. It assumes the chosen loss reduction converts directly into productive time or recovered quality output without changing the other factors.
If your reduced-speed losses are not tracked in minutes today, estimate them as the gap between ideal output and actual output converted into time at ideal cycle.
What This OEE Calculator Helps You Measure
OEE brings time loss, speed loss, and quality loss into one practical equipment-performance
view. This calculator helps teams move from disconnected downtime notes into Availability,
Performance, Quality, total OEE, and a ranked Six Big Losses picture.
That makes it useful for production reviews, TPM activity, shift handoffs, and investment
prioritization when leaders need to know which loss category is actually dragging output.
Core OEE Formulas
Metric
Formula
Meaning
Availability
Run Time / Planned Production Time
How much scheduled time was actually available to run.
Performance
(Ideal Cycle Time x Total Count) / Run Time
How close actual speed stayed to ideal speed.
Quality
Good Count / Total Count
How much output was saleable the first time.
OEE
Availability x Performance x Quality
Combined picture of time, speed, and quality effectiveness.
Worked Example
Suppose a line has 480 planned minutes, 430 run minutes, an ideal cycle time of 45 seconds,
520 total units, and 502 good units. Availability is 89.58%, Performance is 89.76%, and
Quality is 96.54%, which produces an OEE near 78.4%.
That result says the line is not failing in only one dimension. The calculator then helps
break the losses into categories so improvement effort targets the biggest drag instead of
reacting to whichever problem was most visible on one shift.
How to Interpret the OEE Output
Low Availability: breakdowns, changeovers, and waiting losses dominate.
Low Performance: the line runs, but not at the ideal pace.
Low Quality: the process is consuming time to make parts that are not good output.
Strong OEE with weak trend stability: current performance may still be fragile.
Pareto concentration: if one loss consumes most of the total, attack that category first.
OEE Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good OEE score?
The answer depends on process type, automation level, mix, and maturity. The real value is comparison over time and by asset family, not a generic benchmark alone.
Why does OEE need all three factors?
Because time, speed, and quality losses can hide each other. A line can run often but slowly, or run fast but generate too much scrap.
What are the Six Big Losses?
They are the common TPM loss categories: breakdowns, setup and adjustments, minor stops, reduced speed, startup rejects, and production rejects.
Should rework count as good output?
Usually no for first-pass quality logic. If the part required extra work to become saleable, the process still consumed hidden loss.
What is the most common OEE mistake?
Using OEE as a report card without using the loss breakdown to drive action. OEE alone is only a summary number.