Shop Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1911
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 207
UDK: 658.01 Tay
With an introduction by Henry R. Towne
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SHOP MANAGEMENT
163
Table 3 (page 164) gives the times for throwing
earth to different distances and different heights.
It will be seen that for each special material the
time for filling shovel remains the same regardless
of the distance to which it is thrown. Each kind
of material requires a different time for filling the
shovel. The time throwing one shovelful, on the v
other hand, varies with the length of throw, but
for any given distance it is the same for all of the
earths. If the earth is of such a nature that it
sticks to the shovel, this relation does not hold.
For the elements of shoveling we have therefore:
s = time filling shovel and straightening up ready
to throw.
t = time throwing one shovelful.
w = time walking one foot with loaded shovel.
w1 = time returning one foot with empty shovel.
L — load of a shovel in cubic feet.
P = percentage of a day required for rest and neces-
sary delays.
T = time for shoveling one cubic yard.
Our formula, then, for handling any earth after
it is loosened, is:
[s 4-1 + (w + w1) distance carried] — )(1 + P).
Where the material is simply thrown without
walking, the formula becomes:
/ 97\
T = ((s + t)j- (1+P).
If weights are used instead of volumes: