I qualify to answer in terms of girth and mass

, so,
I''m not exactly sure what your question is, but it appears that you're making stamping dies (?) and one key indicator for the process is how often the first iteration is successful, and you want to know what a reasonable target or goal might be. If that's the case, here are some questions you need to answer before you can set a goal:
- How good are you now? (Do you have data?)
- What attributes of the present process prevent you from being better?
- Are there any patterns or trends in the existing performance data (e.g., do the same types of errors cause rework and delay)?
- Are there "outside" causes (such as ambiguous customer drawings and specifications) that contribute to rework and delay?
These are just a few, but you get the idea. Before you can set a realistic goal, you have
know your process. Just because company
X has a first-run success rate of
Y doesn't mean that you should set
Y as goal arbitrarily--that's a sure recipe for failure, fear and loathing. If someone else is better at what you do than you are, it means that someone else spent more time and effort in designing the process for success.