Through the week our team works on the robot 1500 to 2000, except on Friday we work till 2200+
Saturday we work from 0900 to 2200+. Some of us have been known to work till 0230 Sunday.
On Sunday it’s 1300 till 2000.
As you can tell I’m ex-military
We at Rambots have been working 8am-5pm daily since Jan 5th. Our working ours will now significantly decline as school is about to start for us (college students) on Monday, the 28th.
Team 86 has shifts set up…
Monday-Thursday 5:30 til 9:30
Friday OFF!
Saturday 1:00 til 5:00 and 5:30 til 9:30
Sunday 1:00 til 5:00 and 5:30 til 9:30 At least those are the shifts for students. We, the mentors, are often in the shop until much later. We do less building and more planning or set up things for the kids to do the next day. Each student is required to sign up for one weekday shift and one weekend shift. So yeah I guess that’s that.
Our team Metal-in-Motion works usually Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursday, Fridays, and some Saturdays. We work from about 5:30pm-9:30pm, but there are some days where people are there from 12pm-10pm working. We usually come and go as we need depending on what sub-team are meeting that night:cool:
We have been working since Jan 5, 24/7 taking turns sleeping and eating for about 3 hours. We continue this until the last second of the shipment hour!!
JK We usually work Mon-Thurs 6-9 and Sat from 9-??? and some Sundays.
As the freshman on our team, Colin, pointed out, GRT, the original G-Force, we work after school till bed time every day, and always on weekends. This is probably due to the fact that we students make our own parts, which puts a great time constraint on every thing we do.
Hauppauge, New York team 358 working hours:
Monday-Thursday: 6:00-10:00p.m.
Friday: it depends; sometimes from 3:00 to 10:00 and at other times we start at 6:00 and work until there is nothing else to do or we are so tired that we can’t find the tools anymore.
Saturday: 9:00 to whenever (same deal as Friday nights).
In previous years we have worked overnight but the production process tends to slow down when the human body can no longer function at a normal rate.