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A crew of 4 workers can install 800 linear feet of chain link fence in 8 hours. What is the productivity rate per worker-hour?

Correct Answer

A) 25 linear feet per worker-hour

Total worker-hours = 4 workers × 8 hours = 32 worker-hours. Productivity rate = 800 linear feet ÷ 32 worker-hours = 25 linear feet per worker-hour.

Answer Options
A
25 linear feet per worker-hour
B
100 linear feet per worker-hour
C
200 linear feet per worker-hour
D
800 linear feet per worker-hour

Why This Is the Correct Answer

To find productivity rate per worker-hour, we need to calculate the total worker-hours first, then divide the total work completed by that number. With 4 workers working for 8 hours, we have 32 total worker-hours. Dividing 800 linear feet by 32 worker-hours gives us 25 linear feet per worker-hour. This represents the amount of fence one worker can install in one hour at this crew's productivity level.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option B: 100 linear feet per worker-hour

This answer incorrectly divides 800 linear feet by 8 hours only, ignoring the fact that there are 4 workers contributing to the work, which would overstate the individual worker productivity.

Option C: 200 linear feet per worker-hour

This answer appears to divide 800 by 4 workers, which would give the amount each worker completed over the entire 8-hour period, not the per-hour rate.

Option D: 800 linear feet per worker-hour

This answer represents the total footage installed by the entire crew, not the productivity rate per individual worker-hour, which completely ignores both the number of workers and time factors.

Memory Technique

Remember 'WHIP' - Workers × Hours = Input Productivity. Total work divided by total worker-hours gives you the rate per worker-hour.

Reference Hint

Construction project management or estimating chapters covering labor productivity calculations and crew efficiency measurements

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