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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58 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
weighing 46 pounds, he can then be under load
58 per cent, of the day, and only has to rest during
42 per cent. As the weight grows lighter the man can
remain under load during a larger and larger per-
centage of the day, until finally a load is reached
which he can carry in his hands all day long without
being tired out. When that point has been arrived
at this law ceases to be useful as a guide to a
laborer’s endurance, and some other law must be
found which indicates the man’s capacity for work.
When a laborer is carrying a piece of pig iron
weighing 92 pounds in his hands, it tires him about
as much to stand still under the load as it does to
walk with it, since his arm muscles are under the
same severe tension whether he is moving or not.'
A man, however, who stands still under a load is
exerting no horse-power whatever, and this accounts
for the fact that no constant relation could be traced
in various kinds of heavy laboring work between
the foot-pounds of energy exerted and the tiring
effect of the work on the man. It will also be clear
that in all work of this kind it is necessary for the
arms of the workman to be completely free from
load (that is, for the workman to rest) at frequent
intervals. Throughout the time that the man is
under a heavy load the tissues of his arm muscles
are in process of degeneration, and frequent periods
of rest are required in order that the blood may
have a chance to restore these tissues to their normal
condition.
To return now to our pig-iron handlers at the