

The worker will stay at his job in order to complete one cycle of Work Required before he'll take any time off to go eat/sleep/find tools. Obviously any combination of numbers that multiply to 20 would work here, but the Work Required number also has another effect.

The worker needs to go bang his hammer 4 times (work required) in order to satisfy 1 work time.

Say you have a Work Required of 4 and a Work Time of 5. By multiplying the Work Required number by the Work Time number you get the actual amount of work that is necessary at the building to produce something. Quoted from: CC 1.61 Production and Building Numbersįor clarification sake, you'll notice in the below charts that there are two columns involving work numbers.
