How Many Looms Should One Weaver Handle? A Mathematical Approach to Loom Interference
In a weaving shed, one of the most practical industrial engineering questions is deceptively simple: how many looms should be allotted to one weaver? The answer cannot be decided only by tradition, habit, or a fixed rule such as six looms, eight looms, or twelve looms per weaver. The correct allocation depends on stoppage frequency, service time, loom speed, fabric difficulty, weaver skill, layout, labour cost, and the value of lost production.
The heart of the problem is loom interference. When one weaver attends several looms, a stopped loom may have to wait because the weaver is already correcting another stopped loom. This waiting time is not caused by the technical fault itself. It is caused by the fact that the human attendant is temporarily unavailable. Therefore, loom interference is a man-machine allocation problem.
Table of Contents
- Why Loom Allocation Needs Mathematics
- Basic Variables Used in Loom Interference Study
- Service Loss and Interference Loss
- Loom Efficiency from Interference
- Worked Example 1: Efficiency Loss Due to Interference
- How Many Looms Should Be Allocated to One Weaver?
- Worked Example 2: Adding One More Weaver
- Converting Efficiency Gain into Production Gain
- Economic Decision: Is the Extra Weaver Worth It?
- Optimum Loom Allocation Table
- Practical Interpretation for a Weaving Shed
- Related Reading
- References
- General Disclaimer
1. Why Loom Allocation Needs Mathematics
In many mills, loom allocation is decided by experience. An experienced manager may know that a certain fabric can be run at eight looms per weaver, while another difficult fabric needs only four or six looms per weaver. This practical judgment is valuable, but it becomes stronger when supported by measurement.
The difficulty is that two types of efficiency are involved. First, there is weaver utilisation. If fewer looms are assigned, the weaver may spend more time waiting for a loom to stop. Second, there is loom efficiency. If too many looms are assigned, several stopped looms may wait unattended, and production is lost.
The industrial engineering problem is therefore not merely to keep the weaver busy. It is to find the allocation at which the combined cost of labour and lost loom production is minimum.

2. Basic Variables Used in Loom Interference Study
To study loom interference mathematically, we first define the basic variables. These variables convert a practical weaving-shed situation into a measurable industrial engineering problem.
| Symbol | Meaning | Practical Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| \(N\) | Number of looms assigned to one weaver | For example, 6, 8, 10 or 12 looms per weaver |
| \(T\) | Shift time | For example, 480 minutes in an 8-hour shift |
| \(r\) | Average running time between loom stoppages | How long a loom runs before stopping again |
| \(s\) | Average service time per stoppage | How long the weaver takes to correct the stoppage |
| \(\lambda\) | Stoppage rate per loom | Number of stoppages expected per unit time |
| \(\mu\) | Service rate of the weaver | Number of stoppages the weaver can correct per unit time |
In simple terms, the mathematical treatment asks three questions. How often does each loom stop? How long does each stoppage take to correct? How many looms are competing for the attention of one weaver?
If the average running time between stops is low, the loom stops frequently. If the service time is high, the weaver remains occupied for longer. When frequent stops and long service times are combined with a high number of looms per weaver, interference rises sharply.
3. Service Loss and Interference Loss
A stopped loom loses time in two different ways. The first is service loss, which is the time actually required to correct the problem. The second is interference loss, which is the time the loom waits before the weaver can begin correcting it.
This distinction is extremely important. Service loss is linked to the nature of the stoppage. For example, a warp break, weft break, selvedge problem, or mechanical fault may require a certain correction time. Interference loss, however, is linked to the allocation system. It arises because the weaver is already busy somewhere else.
| Loss Type | Cause | How It Can Be Reduced |
|---|---|---|
| Service loss | The actual technical correction takes time. | Better yarn quality, maintenance, training, correct loom settings. |
| Interference loss | The loom waits because the weaver is attending another loom. | Better loom allocation, improved layout, lower stoppage frequency, faster response. |
4. Loom Efficiency from Interference
Loom efficiency measures the proportion of available loom time that is actually used for running production. If a loom is stopped because of service time or interference waiting time, that time is lost from production.
Here, \(N \times T\) represents total available loom-minutes for the group of looms attended by one weaver. For example, if one weaver attends 8 looms in a 480-minute shift, the total available loom time is:
The lost time must also be expressed in loom-minutes. If one loom waits for 5 minutes, that is 5 loom-minutes lost. If three looms each wait for 5 minutes, that is 15 loom-minutes lost.
5. Worked Example 1: Efficiency Loss Due to Interference
Let us take a simple example. Suppose one weaver is attending 8 looms in one shift. The shift duration is 480 minutes. During the shift, the total service or repair time across all 8 looms is 120 loom-minutes. In addition, the total interference waiting time is 60 loom-minutes.
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Number of looms | \(N = 8\) |
| Shift time | \(T = 480\) minutes |
| Total available loom time | \(8 \times 480 = 3840\) loom-minutes |
| Service loss | 120 loom-minutes |
| Interference loss | 60 loom-minutes |
| Total loss | 180 loom-minutes |
The loom efficiency is:
Now let us calculate what the efficiency would have been if there were no interference waiting time. In that case, only the service loss of 120 loom-minutes would be counted.
Therefore, the efficiency loss caused specifically by interference is:
This example shows the hidden nature of loom interference. The loom does not lose time only when the weaver is physically correcting the fault. It also loses time while waiting for the weaver to become available.
6. How Many Looms Should Be Allocated to One Weaver?
The number of looms per weaver should be decided by comparing different allocation options. The mill should not only ask whether the weaver can manage the looms physically. It should ask whether the additional loom allocation improves total economics.
Suppose a weaving shed has 24 looms. One option is to use 3 weavers, giving 8 looms per weaver. Another option is to use 4 weavers, giving 6 looms per weaver.
| Option | Total Looms | Number of Weavers | Looms per Weaver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Option A | 24 | 3 | 8 |
| Option B | 24 | 4 | 6 |
At first glance, Option A appears better because fewer weavers are needed. However, if eight looms per weaver cause high interference waiting time, the saving in labour may be offset by loss of production. Option B uses one extra weaver, but if it improves loom efficiency enough, it may be economically better.
7. Worked Example 2: Adding One More Weaver
Let us continue with the 24-loom example. Assume the shift time is 480 minutes. Each loom runs for an average of 30 minutes between stoppages, and the average service time per stoppage is 2 minutes.
If each stoppage takes 2 minutes to correct, the unavoidable service loss per loom is:
This 32 minutes is the basic service loss. Even if the weaver attends every stoppage immediately, this time will still be lost because the loom must be corrected and restarted.
Now suppose time study shows the following interference waiting times:
| Allocation | Looms per Weaver | Service Loss per Loom | Interference Loss per Loom | Total Loss per Loom |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Option A | 8 | 32 minutes | 18 minutes | 50 minutes |
| Option B | 6 | 32 minutes | 9 minutes | 41 minutes |
For 8 looms per weaver, the loom efficiency is:
For 6 looms per weaver, the loom efficiency is:
Therefore, adding one more weaver improves efficiency by:
This is a very important way to express the improvement. The efficiency has not merely improved by a vague “about two percent.” It has moved from 89.58% to 91.46%, which is a gain of 1.88 percentage points.
8. Converting Efficiency Gain into Production Gain
Efficiency percentage becomes useful only when it is converted into production. Suppose each loom produces 10 metres per hour when running. There are 24 looms, and the shift is 8 hours.
For Option A, with 3 weavers and 8 looms per weaver:
For Option B, with 4 weavers and 6 looms per weaver:
The additional production obtained by adding one more weaver is:
Therefore, in this example, one extra weaver gives 36 additional metres per shift by reducing loom interference. Whether this is worthwhile depends on the value of those 36 metres and the cost of the additional weaver.
9. Economic Decision: Is the Extra Weaver Worth It?
The final decision should be economic, not emotional. A production manager may feel that more workers will reduce stoppages. A cost manager may feel that fewer workers will reduce labour cost. Industrial engineering reconciles these two views by comparing extra production value with extra labour cost.
Suppose the contribution margin is ₹25 per metre. The extra production value is:
If the extra weaver costs ₹800 per shift, the net gain is:
In this case, adding the fourth weaver is economically justified, although the benefit is small. But if the contribution margin is only ₹15 per metre, the extra production value becomes:
If the extra weaver still costs ₹800 per shift, the decision changes:
In this second case, adding the fourth weaver is not justified. The same efficiency improvement produces different decisions depending on the fabric value, contribution margin, and labour cost.
10. Optimum Loom Allocation Table
A useful industrial engineering practice is to prepare an allocation table. Instead of arguing whether 6, 8 or 10 looms per weaver is correct, the mill can compare different alternatives in terms of expected efficiency, production, labour cost, and net contribution.
| Number of Weavers | Looms per Weaver | Estimated Loom Efficiency | Production per Shift | Labour Cost | Net Contribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 12 | 85.0% | 1632 m | ₹1600 | ₹39,200 |
| 3 | 8 | 89.6% | 1720 m | ₹2400 | ₹40,600 |
| 4 | 6 | 91.5% | 1756 m | ₹3200 | ₹40,700 |
| 5 | 4.8 | 92.5% | 1776 m | ₹4000 | ₹40,400 |
In this illustration, the fourth weaver gives the best net contribution. The fifth weaver improves efficiency and production slightly, but the additional labour cost is higher than the value of the extra production. Therefore, 4 weavers for 24 looms may be the optimum point in this particular example.
11. Practical Interpretation for a Weaving Shed
The mathematical treatment of loom interference gives a disciplined way to think about loom allocation. A higher number of looms per weaver reduces labour cost per loom, but increases the probability of waiting. A lower number of looms per weaver reduces waiting, but increases labour cost.
The best allocation depends on the actual mill situation. For high-speed looms, high-value fabric, frequent stoppages, difficult yarns, complicated weave structures, sarees with borders, jacquards, dobby fabrics, or sensitive filament fabrics, fewer looms per weaver may be justified. For stable simple fabrics with good yarn preparation and low breakage, more looms per weaver may be economical.
The following practical rule can be used:
| Condition | Likely Allocation Decision |
|---|---|
| High stoppage frequency | Reduce looms per weaver |
| Long service time per stoppage | Reduce looms per weaver |
| High loom speed or high fabric value | Reduce looms per weaver because every stopped minute is costly |
| Low stoppage frequency and simple fabric | More looms per weaver may be possible |
| High labour cost and low production value | More looms per weaver may be economically necessary |
The IE department should ideally collect three timestamps for every stoppage: when the loom stopped, when the weaver began attending, and when the loom restarted. This separates interference time from service time.
Once these two times are separated, the mill can judge whether the problem is technical, organisational, or both. If service time is high, training, maintenance, yarn quality, sizing, or loom settings may need improvement. If interference time is high, loom allocation, layout, signal visibility, and manpower planning need review.
Related Reading on Fabric Construction, Yarn Quality and Weaving Decisions
Related Reading on Fabric Construction, Yarn Quality and Weaving Decisions
References
- Kuo, C. F. J., & Tsai, C. Y. “Impact of Loom Interference on Productivity.” Textile Research Journal, 2000.
- Alwerfalli, D. R. A Study of Models for Optimum Assignment of Manpower to Weaving Machines. Georgia Institute of Technology, 1978. Available at: https://repository.gatech.edu/bitstreams/721783bb-5910-4164-aa13-499ce92a9b08/download
- “A New Approach of the Machine Interference Problem.” WSEAS Conference Paper, 2006. Available at: https://www.wseas.us/e-library/conferences/2006lisbon/papers/517-577.pdf
- Jaiswal, N. K. “Finite-Source Queuing Models.” Case Western Reserve University, 1966. Available at: https://commons.case.edu/wsom-ops-reports/210/
- “Efficiency Losses of a Modern Loom with Respect to Weft and Warp Breakages.” SAS Publishers, 2022. Available at: https://www.saspublishers.com/article/11351/download/
General Disclaimer
This article is intended for educational understanding of loom interference, loom allocation and industrial engineering calculations in weaving. The numerical examples are simplified illustrations. Actual values in a weaving shed will depend on loom type, fabric construction, yarn quality, stoppage frequency, service time, layout, weaver skill, maintenance condition, labour cost and contribution per metre.
The formulas and examples should not be treated as universal standards for all mills. Before changing loom allocation, a mill should conduct proper time study, collect reliable stoppage data, separate service time from interference waiting time, and evaluate the economic impact under its own production conditions.



