student123
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2009
- Messages
- 183
- Reaction score
- 0
I should start by saying this isn't meant to be about setting a stopwatch against model engineering. We can (hopefully usually) take pleasure in working at a pace where we enjoy model making.
A little story: years back I taught myself computer programming. Wrote many thousands of lines of code.
More recently I decided to add a theoretical basis to that practical experience & went to college for a course in software engineering.
At one lecture I was introduced to 'COCOMO'. Its a set of formulae that can be used to estimate how long it takes to create software, based on nature of the job, skill of the programmers etc.
My first reaction was : nah : you cant estimate a project time that way , there's just too many variables
But it turned out I found COCOMO to be very useful (after allowing for things like modern code generators). I even reversed it for my final year project & worked out , for the number of hours available, how many lines of code I could write.
(if interested more on COCOMO at
http://en.wikipedia.org wiki/COCOMO )
So what's this got to do with model engineering?
Well I've wondered if there's an equivalent set of formulae/approach anywhere for model engineering ? Or an attempt at one.
Google searches didnt reveal much when I looked, and of course the home shop environment is different to the commercial.
More generally I'd be interested in anything you might use to scope out a project time in advance, any anecdotes etc.
Mike
A little story: years back I taught myself computer programming. Wrote many thousands of lines of code.
More recently I decided to add a theoretical basis to that practical experience & went to college for a course in software engineering.
At one lecture I was introduced to 'COCOMO'. Its a set of formulae that can be used to estimate how long it takes to create software, based on nature of the job, skill of the programmers etc.
My first reaction was : nah : you cant estimate a project time that way , there's just too many variables
But it turned out I found COCOMO to be very useful (after allowing for things like modern code generators). I even reversed it for my final year project & worked out , for the number of hours available, how many lines of code I could write.
(if interested more on COCOMO at
http://en.wikipedia.org wiki/COCOMO )
So what's this got to do with model engineering?
Well I've wondered if there's an equivalent set of formulae/approach anywhere for model engineering ? Or an attempt at one.
Google searches didnt reveal much when I looked, and of course the home shop environment is different to the commercial.
More generally I'd be interested in anything you might use to scope out a project time in advance, any anecdotes etc.
Mike