Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.
Comment: Reverted from v. 1

When creating your own charts, you’ll need to select which metrics you want to include.

...

Let’s quickly add another KPI.

5. Select the “three dots” in the top-right corner of your KPI widget, and select Duplicate.

...

Your dashboard should now have two identical KPI cards:

...

6. Select the pencil icon beside the second KPI card to edit it.

...

7. Remove the existing metric (OEE) with the garbage can icon. Search for “Good Productionand add it.

...

Image Removed

...

Your screen should now show you Good production and Total Production in the same KPI:

...

Click Apply to save and go back to your dashboard.

Add a Trend Chart

Let’s add a trend chart of your scheduled downtime.

  1. Select Add Widget, and then select Advanced Configuration.

...

2. Open the widget dropdown menu and select Line Chart. For your X-Axis, Add and select “Calendar DateTime

...

3. Click the “Y” icon next to Calendar DateTime and change the intervals to Days.

...

4. In your Values panel, click Add, and then search and select “Scheduled Hours

...

This doesn’t really show us much yet. Let’s add a widget filter.

Add a Widget Filter

...

In the same widget panel, click Add in your Widget Filters panel.

...

...

Search and select “ReasonState Name

...

De-select every item here, and then search for and select a single Reason that you really care about (in this example, we will use “Changeover”).

...

Image Removed

...

Add a Trendline

Let’s finish with a Linear Regression to determine if your Changeover durations are getting longer or shorter over the course of time.

  1. Right-click on “Total Scheduled Hours” and select Duplicate.

    Image Removed

  2. For this duplicated measure, Right-click it and select Regression → Linear

    Image Removed

...

Click Apply to save your widget to your dashboard.

...

This guide explains each metric and provides examples where applicable.

Info

The term “Dim” is frequently used, and is a short-form for “Dimension”. This is simply a technical term to refer to a common category of metrics.

Category

Measure

Definition

Example

Dim Areas

Division

Division2

Division3

Line

Line Area

Line Area2

Line Area3

Plant

Plant Area

Plant Area2

Plant Area3

Plant Area4

Dim Dates

Filter by label (Content by label)
kb-how-to-article
showLabelsfalse
max5
spacescom.atlassian.confluence.content.render.xhtml.model.resource.identifiers.SpaceResourceIdentifier@91fa3f99
showSpacefalse
sortmodified
typeshowSpacepagefalse
reversetruelabels
typepage
cqllabel = "kb-how-to-article" and type = "page" and space = "SLXDOC"
labelskb-how-to-article
Page Properties
hiddentrue

Related issues