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Martti Saarilahti (email), R. E. L. Ole-Meiludie

Production rate and work strain on workers in cutting of pines in Tanzania.

Saarilahti M., Ole-Meiludie R. E. L. (1987). Production rate and work strain on workers in cutting of pines in Tanzania. Silva Fennica vol. 21 no. 1 article id 5308. https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a15465

Abstract

A team of 2 experienced workers was time-studied and their heart rate recorded under 4 days in clearcutting of a highly self-pruned Pinus patula Schltdl. & Cham. plantation. Task work and bonus payment systems were compared, but there was no difference in production rate, only the workplace time was extended from 2.3 h/d in task work to 3.9 h/d in bonus payment. The heart rate was 115–116 P/min in felling, 105–109 P/min in debranching and 109–114 P/min in bucking. The average heart rate in timber cutting was 108–109 P/min. Work load index was 34–37%, and the workers did not show any symptoms of accumulated stress. The production rate was 3.2 m3/h, (WPT, crew), which corresponds average piecework rate, the comparable walking speed being about 6.0 km/h. There are possibilities to increase the daily task by ergonomic grounds.

The PDF includes an abstract in Finnish.

Keywords
logging; forest work; physical stress; Tanzania; payment system; production rate

Published in 1987

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Available at https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.a15465 | Download PDF

Creative Commons License CC BY-SA 4.0

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