Quote:
Originally posted by Jamo
He did not say in a half a day (12 hours), and he sure as heck didn't say four hours.
Richard, I know you really don't like folks that comment on your statements when they have misread them, so I was sure you'd want to know what David's actual statement was. Obviously Lew was not making the technical point you expounded on.
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Jamo and company,
My apologies.
I made the assumption that Lew was and David K. were using the standard of a "DAY" to mean a "SHIFT".
Shifts are normally 8 hours. Therefore, I took half of a day to mean 4 hours.
In the production businesses that I am familar with, this is still the standard and all production records are based on this number. (8)
However, using your terminology and definition of a "DAY", then David K. is quite correct in his statement.
Once again, my sincere apologies.
We were speaking different languages.