Weighing, Dosing & Loss-in-Weight Feeding worked example
Scale Resolution at 99% gravimetric control efficiency: a worked example
What does the result look like when gravimetric control efficiency reaches 99%? The full calculation is worked below with real intermediate numbers. Use it when scale resolution in weighing, dosing and loss-in-weight feeding is being committed and you need a throughput number you can defend.
The inputs for this scenario
- Units weighed and dosed: 1,200 units (unchanged)
- Weighing runtime: 8 hr (unchanged)
- Gravimetric control efficiency: 99 % (raised for this scenario; the documented default is 90)
Working through the calculation
- Applying the documented formula (Raw scale resolution = completed output รท runtime) to the inputs above produces each figure below.
- At this operating point the engine returns 149 units for effective throughput, the number this scenario is built around.
- At this operating point the engine returns 150 units for raw throughput.
- At this operating point the engine returns 99 % for efficiency.
- At this operating point the engine returns 8 hr for runtime.
How this compares with the baseline
- Against the tool's baseline example, where gravimetric control efficiency sits at 90% and the headline result is 135 units, this scenario comes in 10% above the baseline at 149 units.
- A figure at this level is achievable when gravimetric control efficiency is genuinely sustained, not just peaked for a shift. It applies a single flat efficiency to the whole run, so it won't capture how efficiency sags near the end of a hopper's contents or spikes right after a refill.
Results at a glance
- Effective throughput: 149 units (headline result)
- Raw throughput: 150 units
- Efficiency: 99 %
- Runtime: 8 hr
Run it with your numbers
- Every input above is editable in the live Scale Resolution calculator, which recalculates instantly and can be shared with the inputs intact.
Last reviewed 2026-05-12.