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Subject: 
Re: ISD build record
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.events, lugnet.events.1000steine-land, lugnet.events.brickfest
Date: 
Fri, 9 Jul 2004 07:12:53 GMT
Viewed: 
10512 times
  
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




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
SNIP

Really?

Subtracting on one side to make 10 and adding on the other to make 11 is not doing the same function on both sides. Just the maths pedant in me speaking, but last I checked, when doing statistical, numerical, any kind of analysis, the objective is to make all sides fair. therefore, there is one possible option:

a) Find the lowest common denominator of 10 and 11 (in this case, 110) and multiply the side with 10 people by 10 (Since the number being multiplied is larger) , and the side with 11 people by 11 (Since the number being multiplied is smaller). This will give a standard answer that will show clearly the variation (and if you really must, you can divide these times by 10 each afterwards to get the times for 10 people)

PDX: 1 hour 9 minutes and 22 seconds = 4162 seconds x10 = 41620 (duh, it’s x10 :) )

Lastest record: 1 hour 2 minutes and 28 seconds = 3748 seconds x11 = 41228

Now dividing both sides by 10 (thus assuming 10 people on each team) we get

PDX: 4162 seconds

Latest record: 4122.8 seconds

this means PDX result is 1 hour 9 minutes and 22 seconds

and the latest record is 1 hour 8 minutes and 43 seconds (rounded up, though it should be down)

Top that, calculation-boy!

Now, all of this is actually pointless as pointed out in previous posts, as the 11th man was not actually helping with the building. (Well, one assumes not)

but even if he was, the latest record still stands.


   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

Heh, sorry to jump all over you like that Todd, but I could not let that maths stand.

Just my two 1x1 round plates

Cheers,

Matt



Message has 1 Reply:
  Re: ISD build record
 
(...) Snipped for brevity (...) I would also like to point out that the BrickFest PDX 2004 event was held at sea level and the latest "attempt" was carried out in Germany at an altitude greatly above sea level. The differences in atmospheric density (...) (20 years ago, 9-Jul-04, to lugnet.events, lugnet.events.1000steine-land, lugnet.events.brickfest, FTX)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: ISD build record
 
(...) 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. (...) (20 years ago, 8-Jul-04, to lugnet.events, lugnet.events.1000steine-land, lugnet.events.brickfest, FTX)  

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