Gage R&R Calculator

Calculate gage repeatability and reproducibility (%GRR) to evaluate measurement system variation. Determine if gages are adequate for process control.

GRR
0.01803
√(EV² + AV²)
%GRR (Study)
22.50%
Marginal
%GRR (Tolerance)
92.80%
GRR × 5.15 / Tolerance
ndc
6
Adequate (≥ 5)
Planning notes, formulas, and examples

About the Gage R&R Calculator

Gage Repeatability and Reproducibility (Gage R&R) is a measurement system analysis technique that quantifies how much of the observed process variation is due to the measurement system itself rather than actual part-to-part differences.

Repeatability (Equipment Variation, EV) measures the variation when the same operator measures the same part multiple times with the same gage. Reproducibility (Appraiser Variation, AV) measures the variation when different operators measure the same parts with the same gage.

The combined Gage R&R (%GRR) is compared against total process variation or tolerance to determine if the measurement system is adequate. A %GRR below 10% is generally acceptable; 10–30% may be acceptable depending on the application; above 30% is unacceptable.

This measurement forms a critical foundation for capacity planning, helping teams align production capabilities with demand forecasts and strategic business objectives throughout the planning cycle. Integrating this calculation into regular operational reviews ensures that key decisions are grounded in current data rather than outdated assumptions or rough approximations from the past.

When This Page Helps

Without a capable measurement system, all inspection data is unreliable. Gage R&R studies expose hidden measurement variation that can cause false accepts, false rejects, and misleading SPC charts. It is a prerequisite for valid process capability studies.

How to Use the Inputs

  1. Enter the number of parts, operators, and trials in your study.
  2. Enter Equipment Variation (EV) — typically from the R-bar method.
  3. Enter Appraiser Variation (AV).
  4. Enter either the total process variation or tolerance for comparison.
  5. Review %GRR and the acceptability determination.
  6. If %GRR is too high, investigate gage resolution, calibration, and operator training.
Formula used
GRR = √(EV² + AV²) %GRR (Study Variation) = (GRR / Total Variation) × 100 %GRR (Tolerance) = (GRR × 5.15) / Tolerance × 100 Acceptability: • < 10% — Acceptable • 10–30% — Marginal • > 30% — Unacceptable

Example Calculation

Result: %GRR = 22.5%

GRR = √(0.015² + 0.010²) = √(0.000225 + 0.0001) = √0.000325 = 0.01803. %GRR = (0.01803 / 0.080) × 100 = 22.5%. This is marginal — acceptable for some applications, but improvement is recommended.

Tips & Best Practices

  • Use at least 10 parts, 3 operators, and 2–3 trials for a robust study.
  • Select parts that span the full range of the process — not just good parts.
  • Blind the operators to prevent memorization of readings.
  • Ensure the gage resolution is at least 1/10 of the tolerance.
  • If AV is the dominant contributor, focus on operator training and standardized procedures.
  • If EV dominates, evaluate gage condition, clamping, environmental factors, and consider a better gage.

AIAG MSA Reference Manual

The Automotive Industry Action Group (AIAG) Measurement Systems Analysis manual is the industry standard reference for Gage R&R studies. It describes the ANOVA and Range (Xbar-R) methods, acceptance criteria, and study design guidelines.

Gage R&R Methods

The Xbar-R method uses range calculations and is simpler. The ANOVA method provides more information, including operator-by-part interaction. Both typically yield similar %GRR values, but ANOVA is preferred when interaction effects are suspected.

Beyond Gage R&R

Gage R&R is one component of a complete measurement system analysis. Other components include bias (accuracy), linearity (accuracy across the measurement range), and stability (consistency over time). A comprehensive MSA evaluates all of these.

Sources & Methodology

Last updated:

Frequently Asked Questions

  • EV (Equipment Variation / Repeatability) is the variation from the gage itself when one operator measures one part repeatedly. AV (Appraiser Variation / Reproducibility) is the additional variation introduced by different operators measuring the same parts.