Finishing worked example

Recoat Cost with parts to recoat of 250 parts: a worked example

This scenario runs the recoat cost calculation on the strong side: parts to recoat of 250 parts, with every other input held at its documented default. Use this calculator for practical powder coating or surface finishing planning, quoting, troubleshooting, or line setup.

The inputs for this scenario

  • Parts to recoat: 250 parts (raised for this scenario; the documented default is 100)
  • Recoating material per part: 2.5 $ / part (unchanged)
  • Recoat labor cost: 150 $ (unchanged)
  • Extra oven and handling cost: 75 $ (unchanged)

Working through the calculation

  • Applying the documented formula (Total cost = quantity × unit cost + labor/downtime + overhead) to the inputs above produces each figure below.
  • At this operating point the engine returns 850 $ for total cost, the number this scenario is built around.
  • At this operating point the engine returns 3.4 $ / piece for cost per piece.
  • At this operating point the engine returns 625 $ for variable cost.
  • At this operating point the engine returns 225 $ for fixed adders.

How this compares with the baseline

  • Against the tool's baseline example, where parts to recoat sits at 100 parts and the headline result is 475 $, this scenario comes in 78.95% above the baseline at 850 $.
  • Use it when deciding recoat versus strip-and-restart, or when costing the impact of first-pass finish failures. Treat this as a target state: the delta against the baseline quantifies what the improvement is worth before you commit to chasing it.

Results at a glance

  • Total cost: 850 $ (headline result)
  • Cost per piece: 3.4 $ / piece
  • Variable cost: 625 $
  • Fixed adders: 225 $

Run it with your numbers

  • Every input above is editable in the live Recoat Cost calculator, which recalculates instantly and can be shared with the inputs intact.

Last reviewed 2026-05-12.