Thanks Evan.
I am sorry not being clear enough. I have both type of scenarios in fact. For assay or potency, I have 5 stratified samples collected during filling of tubes. This is based on the level of bulk in the storage tank. So I have 5 data points of potency of the same lot. My final assay should be the average of these 5 data points but it is reported as is. Say I have 10 batches of product, which will give me 50 data points. If I don't use subgroup of 5 in this case, I will see N=50 in the report. But using subgroup of 5 will produce a report of N=10. Is this the case? Does it count the variability of subgroup? I will check this but will appreciate your input as well.
For second scenario, in fact this is for content uniformity in a tube (Top, middle, bottom sample analysis from a tube). When I analyze, for example, data from tubes from 10 different batches, I have 30 data points. As said before, without grouping I will get Report of N=30 and with grouping of 3, I will get report with N=10. My goal is to use all data points but get report of actual number of batches. Please advise.
In another scenario, grouping will be difficult. I have three different types: say, 5 and 3 stratifications as well as multiple time points for each batch under stability (o, 3, 6,12,18,24,36 months). How can I accommodate these three different numerical subgroups for single column of response (for example viscosity or assay) during analysis?