Posted by Russell Eberhardt on 24/12/2014 11:54:10:
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A question Russ; what inspired you to follow that career path?
Russell.
Hmmmm, interesting – I don't know how to answer that and it's got me thinking right back to my childhood. I used to ask questions constantly, why this, why that – I'm amazed my dad didn't tell me to put a sock in it – I've always wanted to know why things worked, not just how they worked, and also as your young lad, could I make it better or change something and it would still work – I remember at the age of about 11 or 12, I got an RC hovercraft. It was good, but I knew I could make it better, I cut away the guarding on the intake fan and glued little bits of plastic to the rubber skirt where it touched the ground to reduce friction – I also used a hot knife to cut off any "decorative" bits and the odd bit of webbing inside the chassis – and it moved like it had never moved before – the batteries would last longer and it was much faster on carpet – success.
I'm not sure when but sooner or later there were questions that couldn't be asked or answers. I knew then how something worked, but then I asked why does it work – perhaps looking at a 2 stroke engine, the old H2 in the garage and I knew certain things were metal, others were aluminium alloys, I was aware of the differences in their properties from experience and general knowledge , these bits had bearings, this that and the other but "why" this, and why "that" – far to many questions – this wasn't the deciding point, there was no epiphany I just grew up this way, natural progression I guess.
The bottom line was nobody was going to answer all these questions, in fact none could be answered without a proper assessment and evaluation, it been "engineered" like that in the first place. Consider it a kind of language – the answer as to why it worked (or didn't!) was written all over it, in the way it had been made and what it was made from. I'd need to know "the language", to understand it fully and make my own evaluations, answer my own questions and make my own "things".
It's not really a career, it started a long time before I even knew of the word.
I think quite often people don't understand what engineering is, or how it affects their day to day, but yet they spend most of their time in a cocoon of engineered objects or objects made or brought to them by engineering be it mechanical, electrical, material engineering etc.
Thanks for asking, that got me thinking.
All the best,