Applied Motion Study
A Collection Method to industrial Preparedness
Forfatter: L.M. Gilbreth, Frank B. Gilbreth
År: 1918
Forlag: George Routledge & Sons, Ltd.
Sted: London
Sider: 220
UDK: 658.54 Gil
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170
APPLIED MOTION STUDY
1. What has been done.
2. What is being done.
3. What is to be done.
That is, let us review the past, view the present,
and pre-view the future. We may, perhaps, be
excused, since our . aim at this time is to bring
before you the practice of Scientific Management,
for referring, in the remainder of this chapter,
largely to our work, in that we can here with the
greatest ease give you concrete examples of ac-
tual working practice. We realised early that
fatigue is of two kinds,
1. Necessary fatigue.
2. Unnecessary fatigue.
that unnecessary fatigue is inexcusable, that only
that amount of necessary fatigue must be per-
mitted in a day from which the worker can re-
cover during the interval from the close of one
working day to the opening of the next. Nat-
urally, the most efficiency, as well as the most hu-
manitarian method is to eliminate all unneces-
sary fatigue possible, and to provide for such effi-
cient rest periods that recovery from necessary
fatigue may take place in the shortest amount of
time, and with the greatest amount of satisfac-