Foundry & Forging calculator

Shot Blast Capacity Calculator

Estimate shot blast capacity for foundry and forging using production-ready inputs so teams can confirm whether capacity can cover demand before committing the schedule. Combine cycle output, available cycles, uptime, and yield to see the good pieces per shift, not the brochure number.

What this calculator does

  • Estimate shot blast capacity for foundry and forging using production-ready inputs so teams can confirm whether capacity can cover demand before committing the schedule.
  • Use it when shot blast capacity in foundry and forging is being asked to take on more work and you need to know if there is room.
  • Turns shot blast capacity output per cycle, available shot blast capacity cycles, expected shot blast capacity uptime into a good output capacity for shot blast capacity in foundry and forging.

Formula used

  • Gross shot blast capacity = shot blast capacity output per cycle × available shot blast capacity cycles
  • Good shot blast capacity = gross capacity × expected shot blast capacity uptime × expected shot blast capacity first-pass yield

Inputs explained

  • Shot blast capacity output per cycle: Use the good units, parts, cavities, assemblies, tests, or batches completed each cycle.
  • Available shot blast capacity cycles: Enter the planned cycles from the shift schedule, takt plan, asset plan, or run calendar.
  • Expected shot blast capacity uptime: Use recent uptime or availability from production reports, maintenance logs, or OEE data.
  • Expected shot blast capacity first-pass yield: Use first-pass yield from inspection, test, quality, or production records for the same scope.

How to use the result

  • Use it when shot blast capacity in foundry and forging is being load-balanced or asked to take on more demand.
  • Setup time, mix changes, and major maintenance windows are not modeled.

Common questions

  • Why use this shot blast capacity tool for foundry and forging? Estimate shot blast capacity for foundry and forging using production-ready inputs so teams can confirm whether capacity can cover demand before committing the schedule. You get a good output capacity you can defend before quoting, scheduling, or sign-off.
  • Which assumptions drive the good output capacity? shot blast capacity output per cycle, available shot blast capacity cycles, expected shot blast capacity uptime usually move the good output capacity most. Pull from measured foundry and forging runs, supplier data, and recent quotes rather than memory.
  • What do I do with this number? Use the good output capacity to commit (or refuse) the next foundry and forging order with confidence.
  • What should I verify first? Validate uptime and yield against a recent shift; both numbers drift quietly when no one is watching.

Last reviewed 2026-05-12.