The replenishment cycle represents a period required to order and make available the required stock. Cycle time is composed of two factors: 1) time cycle; and 2) replenishment cycle.
The time required to complete one cycle of an operation.
The time usually expressed in seconds for a controller to complete one on/off cycle.
Time for a railcar to move from loading point to port and back
The time required by an injection molding system to mold a part.
Cycle time refers to the amount of time, usually in seconds, that a particular function can be cycled (i.e. "boom up"). Cycle time is a means of comparison among excavators.
Time required to pay a claim or respond to "inquiries."
The time it takes to complete one full function, e.g. the evacuation of a mold from atmospheric to the required level of vacuum, then back to atmospheric.
The duration or length of time for one or more development phases. Explicit definition for full NPD would be the duration of development form beginning to end, form idea to product launch.
The total elapsed time to move a unit of work from the beginning to the end of a physical process.
The processing time of a business process from beginning to end. Also known as time-to-market.
The time that elapses from the beginning to the end of a process or subprocess. [GAO
The time necessary to complete a full ON-through-OFF period in a time proportioning control system.
The interval required to complete a task, or function, starting from the beginning of the first step until the completion of the last.
Manual cycle time is the time needed for an operator to complete one work sequence to meet production. The Goal is to have Cycle time = Takt Time
The time of a flush cycle for a toilet. The cycle time begins when the toilet lever is flushed and ends when the water supply shuts off.
The time it takes the central processing unit (CPU) to execute the simplest instruction.
The amount of time it takes to complete a business process.
The time to produce one piece. Inverse of Run Rate.
Average time between completion of successive units. It is directly related to the output rate. A process with an output rate of 4 units per hour has a cycle time of 15 minutes.
The elapsed time for one complete operation or series of operations in any process.
The time it takes to perform a complete cycle on the process in question.
The time during which one molding cycle is completed. Cycle time comprises injection of melt, cure, recovery, part ejection, and clamping for next shot.
The time it takes for a controller to complete one on/off cycle.
The actual time taken for an operator or machine to completely process a product.
The time between the beginning and end of a process.
A sequence of operation that is repeated regularly, the time it takes for one such operation. It is the time required to complete one moulding cycle.
In a retail environment this refers to the time needed for a customer order to be received, processed, filled, shipped and delivered. In a manufacturing environment, it is the time required to collect the raw materials or components and have them delivered to the plant, assembly or manufacturing of the product, and preparing it for availability to the customer.
A critical measure of molding equipment productivity, it is the time for completion of one molding cycle. It can be measured from the time to start filling to the start of the next fill. Cycle times from a few seconds to five minutes are encountered in PIM production.
The total (elapsed) time required to perform an activity or process.
The amount of time in seconds elapsed between pump start and pump shut-down.
The time beginning at the instant a toilet flush lever is actuated, until the instant the water supply shuts off, completing the flush cycle.
the length of time consumed by a freight car from one loading to the next.
The time it takes for a business to receive, fulfil and then deliver an order to a customer. Once measured only in days, many industries now measure cycle time in hours.
The length of time that it takes to make a part and complete preparations to produce the next one. It is the time required to complete one trip through the moulding cycle.
(n) The total time required for a process to take place.
The time it takes to make one part including the closing of the mold, the injection of the resin, the solidification of the part, the opening of the mold and the ejection of the part.