Maison » Takt Time Calculation Formula

Takt Time Calculation Formula

1930
  • German aircraft industry engineers
  • Toyota Motor Corporation

Takt time is the maximum time allowed to produce a product to meet customer demand. It is calculated by dividing the net available production time by the customer demand over that period. The formula is [latex]T = \frac{T_a}{D}[/latex], where T is the Takt time, Ta is the net available time, and D is the customer demand.

The Takt time formula, [latex]T = \frac{T_a}{D}[/latex], is a cornerstone of lean production systems. Its components must be carefully defined for an accurate calculation. ‘Net Available Time’ ([latex]T_a[/latex]) is not simply the total shift time; it is the time that is genuinely available for production. This means subtracting planned stops such as breaks, team meetings, and scheduled maintenance. Unplanned downtime is typically not subtracted from Ta, as its occurrence is a problem to be solved, and including it would artificially inflate the Takt time, masking the underlying issue. ‘Customer Demand’ (D) refers to the number of units the customer requires within the specified time period. This figure should be based on actual sales or orders, not production forecasts, to ensure the system is truly pulled by the customer.

The result of the calculation is a unit of time per piece (e.g., seconds per unit). This value represents the heartbeat of the production system. Every poste de travail in the production process is then designed and balanced to complete its tasks within this time. If a station’s cycle time exceeds the Takt time, it becomes a bottleneck, unable to keep up with customer demand. Conversely, a cycle time significantly below the Takt time indicates excess capacity, which can lead to overproduction, a primary form of waste in lean philosophy. Therefore, the formula provides a clear, objective target for process design and continuous improvement activities.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 3308
– Industrial technology

Type

Abstract System

Disruption

Substantial

Utilisation

Widespread Use

Precursors

  • principles of scientific management by Frederick Winslow Taylor
  • assembly line concepts pioneered by Henry Ford
  • early industrial engineering time and motion studies
  • the need for synchronized production in the German aircraft industry of the 1930s

Applications

  • production line balancing
  • maigre fabrication systèmes
  • just-in-time (JIT) inventory management
  • workload balancing in cellular manufacturing
  • service industry workflow design (e.g., call centers)

Brevets :

QUE

Potential Innovations Ideas

!niveaux !!! Adhésion obligatoire

Vous devez être membre de l'association pour accéder à ce contenu.

S’inscrire maintenant

Vous êtes déjà membre ? Connectez-vous ici
Related to: takt time, formula, lean manufacturing, customer demand, available time, production rate, système de production toyota, industrial engineering

Laisser un commentaire

Votre adresse e-mail ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *

DISPONIBLE POUR DE NOUVEAUX DÉFIS
Mechanical Engineer, Project, Process Engineering or R&D Manager
Développement de produits efficace

Disponible pour un nouveau défi dans un court délai.
Contactez-moi sur LinkedIn
Plastic metal electronics integration, Design-to-cost, GMP, Ergonomics, Medium to high-volume devices & consumables, Lean Manufacturing, Regulated industries, CE & FDA, CAD, Solidworks, Lean Sigma Black Belt, medical ISO 13485

Nous recherchons un nouveau sponsor

 

Votre entreprise ou institution est dans le domaine de la technique, de la science ou de la recherche ?
> envoyez-nous un message <

Recevez tous les nouveaux articles
Gratuit, pas de spam, email non distribué ni revendu

ou vous pouvez obtenir votre adhésion complète - gratuitement - pour accéder à tout le contenu restreint >ici<

Historical Context

(if date is unknown or not relevant, e.g. "fluid mechanics", a rounded estimation of its notable emergence is provided)

Related Invention, Innovation & Technical Principles

Retour en haut

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi