... 50 cents per piece being the price paid for the work. After analyzing the job and determining the shortest time required to do each of the elementary operations of which it was composed, and then summing up the total, the writer became convinced that... The Theory of Economic Progress - Page 121by John Bates Clark - 1896 - 45 pagesFull view - About this book
| American Society of Mechanical Engineers - 1895 - 1820 pages
...good illustration of what can be accomplished by it. A standard steel forging, many thousands of which are used each year, had for several years been turned...understood that it involved removing, with a single 16-inch lathe, having two saddles, an average of more than 800 pounds of steel chips in ten hours.... | |
| American Society of Mechanical Engineers - 1895 - 1274 pages
...good illustration of what can be accomplished by it. A standard steel forging, many thousands of which are used each year, had for several years been turned...as the tools would allow, and under a heavy feed. A PIECE-RATE SYSTEM. the speed of 10 per day, and when they produced less than 10, they received only... | |
| 1896 - 104 pages
...good illustration of what can be accomplished by it. A standard steel forging, many thousands of which are used each year, had for several years been turned...understood that it involved removing, with a single 16-inch lathe having two saddles, an average of more than 800 pounds of steel chips in ten hours. In... | |
| Halbert Powers Gillette, Richard Turner Dana - 1909 - 380 pages
...at the rate of from four to five per day under the ordinary system of piece work, 50 cents per piece paid for the work. After analyzing the job, and determining...as the tools would allow, and under a heavy feed. (Ordinary tempered tools i inch by 1Yi inches, made of carbon tool steel, were used for this work.)... | |
| Holden A. Evans - 1911 - 272 pages
...years been turned at the rate of from four to five per day under the ordinary system of piece work, 50 cents per piece being the price paid for the work....understood that it involved removing, with a single 1 6-inch lathe, having two saddles, an average of more than 800 pounds of steel chips in ten hours.... | |
| Holden A. Evans - 1911 - 272 pages
...years been turned at the rate of from four to five per day under the ordinary system of piece work, 50 cents per piece being the price paid for the work....machines, when it is understood that it involved removing, witli a single 1 6-inch lathe, having two saddles, an average of more than 800 pounds of steel chips... | |
| Frederick Winslow Taylor - 1911 - 218 pages
...years been turned at the rate of from four to five per day under the ordinary system of piece work, 50 cents per piece being the price paid for the work....as the tools would allow, and under a heavy feed. Ordinary tempered tools 1 inch by 1J inch, made of carbon tool steel, were used for this work. "It... | |
| 1911 - 138 pages
...been turned at the rate of from four to five per day under the ordinary system of piece work, fifty cents per piece being the price paid for the work....as the tools would allow, and under a heavy feed. (Ordinary tempered tools one inch by one and one-half inches made of carbon tool steel, were used for... | |
| Frederick Winslow Taylor - 1911 - 218 pages
...convinced that it was possible to turn ten pieces a day. To finish the forgings at this rate, Tiowever, the machinists were obliged to work at their maximum...as the tools would allow, and under a heavy feed. Ordinary tempered tools 1 inch by 1J inch, made of carbon tool steel, were used for this work. "It... | |
| Horace Bookwalter Drury - 1915 - 242 pages
...contented. While—in the illustration on which Mr. Taylor dwells—the speed was such that the men " were obliged to work at their maximum pace from morning to night," so that it made a " big day's work, both for men and machines," yet " from the day they first turned... | |
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