Commercial Kitchen Equipment worked example
Assembly Takt with net available assembly time of 230 min / shift: a worked example in commercial kitchen equipment
This worked example runs the assembly takt numbers for a tougher week than the baseline: net available assembly time of 230 min / shift instead of the typical 450 min / shift. Find the takt time for Commercial Kitchen Equipment — the pace, in seconds per unit, that production must hold to exactly meet customer demand.
The inputs for this scenario
- Net available assembly time: 230 min / shift (the input this scenario stresses; the baseline uses 450)
- Customer demand for kitchen units: 60 units / shift (held at the documented default)
- Shifts per day: 2 shifts (held at the documented default)
Working through the calculation
- The calculation starts from the formula this tool documents: Takt time = net available production time × 60 ÷ customer demand.
- Takt time works out to 230 sec / unit at these inputs, and this is the headline figure for the scenario.
- Required rate works out to 15.65 units / hr at these inputs.
- Available time / day works out to 460 min at these inputs.
- Demand / day works out to 120 units at these inputs.
How this compares with the baseline
- Against the tool's baseline example, where net available assembly time sits at 450 min / shift and the headline result is 450 sec / unit, this scenario comes in 48.89% below the baseline at 230 sec / unit.
- Use it when balancing assembly stations, setting line staffing, or checking whether current pace can meet a demand commitment. A result at this level usually justifies acting on the stressed input before touching anything else, because every other figure in the table is downstream of it.
Results at a glance
- Takt time: 230 sec / unit (headline result)
- Required rate: 15.65 units / hr
- Available time / day: 460 min
- Demand / day: 120 units
Run it with your numbers
- To rerun this with your own numbers, open the live Assembly Takt calculator, set net available assembly time to your actual value, and adjust the remaining inputs to match your operation.
Last reviewed 2026-05-12.