Power Electronics, Motors & Drives calculator
Power Module Rework Rate Calculator
Estimate power module rework rate for power electronics, motors and drives using production-ready inputs so teams can track KPI performance and decide whether corrective action is needed. Two counts and a target give you a rate plus how far you are from where you need to be.
What this calculator does
- Estimate power module rework rate for power electronics, motors and drives using production-ready inputs so teams can track KPI performance and decide whether corrective action is needed.
- Use it when power module rework rate in power electronics, motors and drives needs a clean rate and gap-to-target you can put on a tier board.
- Turns power module rework rate count, total power module rework rate population, target power module rework rate into a rate for power module rework rate in power electronics, motors and drives.
Formula used
- Power module rework rate = power module rework rate count ÷ total power module rework rate population × 100
- Power module rework rate gap to target = power module rework rate - target power module rework rate
Inputs explained
- Power module rework rate count: Enter the number of defects, passes, claims, shortages, conforming units, or events being measured.
- Total power module rework rate population: Use the matching inspected, produced, tested, shipped, sampled, or installed population for the same period.
- Target power module rework rate: Enter the KPI, specification, contract target, quality target, or internal control limit.
How to use the result
- Use it when power module rework rate in power electronics, motors and drives is being reviewed against a KPI.
- Trend matters more than a single snapshot; pull the result for the last several periods before you act.
Common questions
- What does the power module rework rate calculator give me? Estimate power module rework rate for power electronics, motors and drives using production-ready inputs so teams can track KPI performance and decide whether corrective action is needed. You get a rate you can defend before quoting, scheduling, or sign-off.
- What numbers should I focus on first? power module rework rate count, total power module rework rate population, target power module rework rate usually move the rate most. Pull from measured power electronics, motors and drives runs, supplier data, and recent quotes rather than memory.
- What do I do with this number? Use the gap to target to prioritize the next power electronics, motors and drives kaizen or corrective action.
- What should I verify first? Confirm the counts came from the same time window and the same scope; mismatched scope is the most common error.
Last reviewed 2026-05-12.