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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THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT 107
to call for merely the trained judgment of any good
mechanic. In fact, however, after working 26 years,
it has been found that the answer in every case
involves the solution of an intricate mathematical
problem, in which the effect of twelve independent
variables must be determined.
Each of the twelve following variables has an
important effect upon the answer. The figures
which are given with each of the variables represent
the effect of this element upon the cutting speed.
For example, after the first variable (A) we quote,
“The proportion is as 1 in the case of semi-hardened
steel or chilled iron to 100 in the case of a very soft,
low-carbon steel.” The meaning of this quotation
is that soft steel can be cut 100 times as fast as the
hard steel or chilled iron. The ratios which are
given, then, after each of these elements, indicate
the wide range of judgment which practically every
machinist has been called upon to exercise in the
past in determining the best speed at which to run
the machine and the best feed to use.
(A) The quality of the metal which is to be cut;
i.e., its hardness or other qualities which affect the
cutting speed. The proportion is as 1 in the case
of semi-hardened steel or chilled iron to 100 in the
case of very soft, low-carbon steel.
(B) The chemical composition of the steel from
which the tool is made, and the heat treatment of
the tool. The proportion is as 1 in tools made from
tempered carbon steel to 7 in the best high-speed tools.