Tube, Pipe & Profile Forming worked example

Tube Cut Length Yield at 68% target first-pass yield: a worked example

Here is what the math looks like when conditions slip. We hold every other input steady and drop target first-pass yield to 68%, then walk the calculation through step by step. Tube Cut Length Yield tells a cut-off saw or flying-cutoff operator what fraction of pieces fall outside the length tolerance and get scrapped or reworked.

The inputs for this scenario

  • Off-length / scrap cuts: 8 units (held at the documented default)
  • Total cuts produced: 250 units (held at the documented default)
  • Target first-pass yield: 68 % (the input this scenario stresses; the baseline uses 95)

Working through the calculation

  • The calculation starts from the formula this tool documents: Tube Cut Length Yield rate = affected amount รท total amount.
  • Rate works out to 3.2 ft at these inputs, and this is the headline figure for the scenario.
  • Gap to target works out to 64.8 points at these inputs.
  • Affected count works out to 8 count at these inputs.
  • Total count works out to 250 count at these inputs.

How this compares with the baseline

  • Against the tool's baseline example, where target first-pass yield sits at 95% and the headline result is 3.2 ft, this scenario lands almost exactly on the baseline at 3.2 ft.
  • The practical read: the gap between this scenario and the baseline is entirely attributable to target first-pass yield, so recovering it is worth quantifying in dollars before considering equipment or staffing changes. It only counts pieces you flagged as off-length; it will not catch cosmetic, wall-thickness, or ovality defects, so a 'good' cut-length yield does not mean a good part.

Results at a glance

  • Rate: 3.2 ft (headline result)
  • Gap to target: 64.8 points
  • Affected count: 8 count
  • Total count: 250 count

Run it with your numbers

  • To rerun this with your own numbers, open the live Tube Cut Length Yield calculator, set target first-pass yield to your actual value, and adjust the remaining inputs to match your operation.

Last reviewed 2026-05-12.