The Principles of Scientific Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1919
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 144
UDK: 658.01 Tay
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102 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
for the scientifically equipped man, who had never
before seen these particular jobs, and who had never
worked on this machine, to do work from two and
one-half to nine times as fast as it had been done
before by a good mechanic who had spent his whole
time for some ten to twelve years in doing this
very work upon this particular machine. In a word,
this was possible because the art of cutting metals
involves a true science of no small magnitude, a
science, in fact, so intricate that it is impossible for
any machinist who is suited to running a lathe year
in and year out either to understand it or to work
according to its laws without the help of men who
have made this their specialty. Men who are un-
familiar with machine-shop work are prone to look
upon the manufacture of each piece as a special
problem, independent of any other kind of machine-
work. They are apt to think, for instance, that the
problems connected with making the parts of an
engine require the especial study, one may say almost
the life study, of a set of engine-making mechanics,
and that these problems are entirely different from
those which would be met with in machining lathe
or planer parts. In fact, however, a study of those
elements which are peculiar either to engine parts
or to lathe parts is trifling, compared with the great
study of the art, or science, of cutting metals, upon
a knowledge of which rests the ability to do really
fast machine-work of all kinds.
The real problem is how to remove chips fast from
a casting or a forging, and how to make the piece