Glossary

Operating Time

Operating time is the portion of planned production time during which equipment or a line is actually running and available to produce.

Operating time commonly refers to the portion of planned production time during which a machine, production line, or process is actually running and available to produce. It excludes periods when the equipment is down, stopped, or not scheduled to run.

What operating time includes

In industrial and manufacturing environments, operating time typically includes:

  • Time when the equipment is running and able to produce at any speed
  • Time with minor speed losses or small disturbances, as long as the asset is not fully stopped
  • Automated or manual production activities where the resource is in use and not in a downtime state

What operating time excludes

Operating time usually excludes:

  • Planned shutdowns (for example, weekends, holidays, planned long maintenance)
  • Unplanned downtime (breakdowns, unplanned maintenance, waiting on materials)
  • Changeovers, cleaning, or setups when the equipment is not capable of running product
  • Administrative or indirect time not related to equipment operation

Use in performance and OEE calculations

Operating time is a core concept in many manufacturing performance metrics and MES reports. In a common OEE-style structure:

  • Planned production time is the time the asset is scheduled to run.
  • Operating time is the portion of planned production time when the asset is actually running (planned production time minus downtime).
  • From operating time, speed losses and quality losses can be separated to calculate availability, performance, and quality indicators.

In OT and MES systems, operating time may be captured by machine state tags (for example, “RUN”, “IDLE”, “STOP”) and is often aggregated by shift, order, or product for analysis.

Operational context

In daily operations, operating time is used to:

  • Compare how long equipment was capable of production versus how long it was scheduled
  • Support root cause analysis of downtime and non-productive time
  • Feed KPI dashboards and audit trails related to utilization and availability

Clear definitions in procedures and MES/ERP configuration are important so that operators, planners, and analysts classify time consistently.

Common confusion

  • Operating time vs. uptime: Uptime sometimes refers broadly to any time a system is not failed, including idle states. Operating time is usually restricted to time actually running for production.
  • Operating time vs. run time: In many plants these terms are used interchangeably. Some organizations define run time as a subset of operating time (for example, only when producing good parts), so local definitions should be checked.
  • Operating time vs. planned production time: Planned production time covers the full scheduled window. Operating time excludes downtime inside that window.

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