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In lugnet.events, Todd Thuma wrote:
> In lugnet.events, Holger Matthes wrote:
> > In lugnet.events, Jan-Albert van Ree wrote:
> > > 1 hour, 2 minutes and 28 seconds
> >
> >
> > <<http://festum.de/1000steine/album/TSL2004_Bauwettbewerb_nach_Zeit_Modell_10030/10030_61.sized.jpg>>
> >
> > The team (from left to right)
> >
> > Holger, Jan, Jan-Albert, Eddie, Juergen, Hendrik, (Jan Beyer form LEGO. He
> > stopped the time) Dominik, Ben, Andreas, Bruno
> >
> >
>
> Hold on a second! A clarification in this post must be made. There are eleven
> (11) people in the picture and eleven (11) people named in the effort.
>
> That means that 11 people completed the ISD build in 1 hour, 2 minutes and 28
> seconds not 10. Is this true?
>
> If true, that means this effort had 11 participants. Analyzing the effort I
> break the record down into per-person time units and discover the following:
>
> A record of 1 hour 2 minutes and 28 seconds is equivalent to 3748 seconds of
> time. Divide 11 builders by 3748 seconds yields 0.0029 builders per seconds
>
> The previous record of 1 hour 9 minutes and 22 seconds is 4162 seconds and
> dividing 10 builders by 4162 seconds yields a 0.0024 builders per second
> ratio. Clearly, 0.0024 is smaller than 0.0029 and therefore faster than this
> attempt.
>
> If we were to factor in this attempt with the builders per second speed
> acheived by the BrickFest PDX record, then this group with their 11 person
> should have acheived a time of 4583.3 seconds or 1 hour 16 min and 23 seconds
> (11 men divided by 0.0024). Obviously, by using the 11th man, the latest
> attempt had an unfair 11th man advantage providing for 14 min in additional
> speed.
>
> If we examined this using the man hour analysis we see that the BrickFest PDX
> attempt was still faster. In the 11 man attempt each person accounted for
> 340.7 seconds of the overall time (obtained by dividing 3748 seconds by 11
> and assumes each person contributed equally). This equates to 5.678 minutes
> per man or 0.0946 man hours. The previous record attempt equated to 416.2
> seconds per man or 0.1156 man hours.
>
> While this second figure is bigger, realize that the 11 man and the 10 man
> groups performed the same task and we must account for the 11th man in the
> latest record attempt. If we subtract the 11th man's contribution, we must
> recaculate the record attempt. To do so, I add the 11th man's time portion to
> the overall time acheived by the 11 person group. This time, 340.7 seconds
> added to the record of 3748 seconds becomes 4088.7 seconds or 1 hour 8 min
> and 8 seconds.
>
> While this time is faster than the BrickFest PDX attempt on the surface, any
> good mathmatician knows that you must perform the same function to both sides
> of the equals sign, so we must also subtract the 11th man's contribution from
> the overall time of the PDX record to determine how fast they could have gone
> with the 11th man. To be fair we use the man hours average of the 10 person
> PDX record of 416.2 seconds per man. The 1 hour 9min 22 second time now
> becomes 3745.8 seconds or 1 hour 2 min and 25.8 seconds.
>
> Obviously, the BrickFest PDX record still stands, when you consider the
> contribution of the 11th man in this last attempt.
>
> Sorry fellows, I guess we will just have to asterix this 11 man attempt as a
> nice try.
>
> Todd
Todd,
Some (not-so-serious) Questions from the mathematically uninitiated:
1) Does 'stopping the time' count as a contribution? Isn't there usually
some sort of official timekeeper separate from the team to keep things honest?
2) Does "builders per second" measure time, or does it actually measure a
number of builders? To measure time, wouldn't one need to look at "seconds per
builder", the accumulation of which would give total number of seconds for the
project - the number itself being the average time spent by each person to build
a little while?
3) Were you on the first team, and therefore a little miffed that this
challenge arose? I would be, too, but I might include lunar orbit decay and
quantum variance in my calculations to just button it up a little more.
Please don't take this the wrong way...I just really don't understand your
calculations. Mine would have seen things differently - again, I'm
mathematically uninitiated. Hope you have fun.
Peace and Long Life,
Tw0nst3r
tw0nst3r@earthlink.net
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