Thermoforming & Vacuum Formed Products calculator
Scrap Cost Calculator
Calculate scrap cost for thermoforming & vacuum formed products planning, quoting, troubleshooting, capacity review, or process improvement. Quantity times rate times capture factor, plus a fixed adjustment, builds a defensible weighted cost.
What this calculator does
- Calculate scrap cost for thermoforming & vacuum formed products planning, quoting, troubleshooting, capacity review, or process improvement.
- Use it when scrap cost in thermoforming and vacuum formed products is being put through a thermoforming and vacuum formed products weighted-cost review.
- Turns scrap cost quantity, scrap cost rate, scrap cost capture factor into a weighted cost for scrap cost in thermoforming and vacuum formed products.
Formula used
- Scrap Cost cost = quantity × rate × capture factor + fixed cost
- Per-unit scrap cost = total cost ÷ quantity
Inputs explained
- Scrap Cost quantity: undefined
- Scrap Cost rate: undefined
- Scrap Cost capture factor: undefined
- Scrap Cost fixed cost: undefined
How to use the result
- Use it when scrap cost in thermoforming and vacuum formed products is being scored for capture or weighted cost.
- Risk-adjustments and discount rates are not in the formula; layer them on top for capital reviews.
Common questions
- Why use this scrap cost tool for thermoforming and vacuum formed products? Calculate scrap cost for thermoforming & vacuum formed products planning, quoting, troubleshooting, capacity review, or process improvement. You get a weighted cost you can defend before quoting, scheduling, or sign-off.
- What numbers should I focus on first? scrap cost quantity, scrap cost rate, scrap cost capture factor usually move the weighted cost most. Pull from measured thermoforming and vacuum formed products runs, supplier data, and recent quotes rather than memory.
- How should I use the result? Use the weighted cost in the thermoforming and vacuum formed products business case or quote build-up.
- What should I verify first? Confirm the capture factor is honest; over-stated capture is the most common reason these models miss.
Last reviewed 2026-05-12.