Manufacturing & Operations
Raw Material Sourcing &
Net Yield Calculator
Determine exact bulk material ordering requirements using the inverse net-yield formula — the method that prevents chronic under-ordering.
🏭 Yield Calculator
Raw Material Net Yield Calculator
Inverse yield method — eliminates procurement shortfalls
Production Target
units
Total shippable, finished pieces required to fulfil the production order.
Process Parameters
%
Expected process loss: setup scrap, trimmings, scale loss, purge material.
0% (no loss)
Scrap: 4.5%
25%+
%
Units that fail inspection after processing — consume full raw material but add nothing to shippable count.
Procurement Constraints
lbs
Supplier's minimum order increment (pallet, coil, drum, roll). Leave 0 to skip bundle rounding.
About Net Yield Calculation
Why can't I just add the scrap % directly to my order?
The flat markup method applies the scrap percentage to the finished weight, not the gross input weight. But the scrap rate describes losses as a fraction of the total material loaded — which is the gross input. Adding 5% to the finished order gives you a 5% buffer on the wrong base. The inverse formula (divide by 1 minus the rate) applies the percentage to the correct base and prevents a systematic shortfall on every run.
What types of loss count as scrap rate?
Scrap rate should capture all material that enters the production process but doesn't become finished product: stamping skeletons, extrusion purge material, slitter trim ribbons, scale loss from thermal processes, setup pieces, quality rejects that can't be reworked, and material lost to measurement error. Constant losses like coil/spool tail ends are often better tracked separately as a fixed per-run allowance rather than folded into the percentage rate.
How often should I update my scrap rate input?
At minimum quarterly, and immediately after any significant tooling change, machine line upgrade, or change in raw material supplier or grade. Scrap rates drift upward gradually as tooling wears and downward after maintenance or process improvement events. Using a stale rate from 18 months ago can introduce errors of 1–3 percentage points — which at high volumes translates to thousands of pounds of either over-order or shortfall.