Original Publish Date : 5/16/2008
Career Profile: Nate Ball
The host of PBS’s Design Squad show talks about his start-up, his degree from MIT, and getting kids interested in engineering.
Edited by Victoria Burt

What attracted you to an engineering career? The constant challenge of solving cool problems. I grew up building everything from hovercraft to rocket launchers, giant underground fort complexes (with electricity and linoleum flooring), and a 5-ft-tall Tesla coil. I’ve always loved building and learning about technology as I go, so pursuing engineering, especially at MIT, seemed like the perfect fit.

What is your typical work day like? First I answer e-mails and then start on design. My job changes a lot because our company is small, but most of the time I focus on either redesigning and updating existing mechanisms, or planning out the next innovation. While designing, my tool set varies widely. I’ll start with hand calculations and sketches, then move to CAD and sometimes modeling, all the way to wrenches and screws, putting together prototype parts of our system.

What kinds of things does your team work on? We do it all, although we are now less involved with the actual manufacturing and production of our system than we used to be. As we refine our existing system and work to launch our upcoming ascender, we work on many aspects of product design. We cover everything from the innovation of the new technology, to ergonomics, structure, system optimization, and design for manufacture. It’s great working in a small company, as we all get to experience the gamut of design engineering.

How many people do you work with? I have three colleagues and many advisers. The four of us are coinventors of the Ascender, and cofounders of the company. We work together on all aspects of the system, trading off tasks as our various specialties come into play.

What tasks do you most like to do? I love prototyping. Coming up with new and improved designs is a thrill like no other — especially testing the latest revision, right at the moment of testing. Of course, as soon as you test, you think of a dozen other things you want to improve. Constantly learning and improving is rewarding. Possibly even more rewarding is hearing how my team’s work will make a difference for many people as they use the Atlas Ascender in their jobs.

What do you least like to do? Probably clean my office. A messy desk is a productive desk.

What traits and habits help you excel in engineering? Teamwork and passion. The sheer excitement my team and I get out of trying out a new design keeps us going full speed all the time. But to really make good use of our passion, we also have to have a lot of perseverance. I see that on Design Squad as the young engineers attack their challenges. The troubleshooting process can get daunting, especially when the stakes are high and you’re invested in a design. If you’re able to keep going through the frustration and learn something every time a project doesn’t work, you’ll be better equipped to solve all problems in the future. And persevering through a tough challenge makes the success all the more satisfying.

What advice would you give a young person interested in pursuing engineering? Dive in head first and do it! A great way to get started is with a program that supports early engineering education, like Odyssey of the Mind, Science Olympiad, FIRST Robotics, and the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. Check out Design Squad to watch kids use engineering to solve real problems on PBS. But even more importantly, just start learning on your own. Engineering has created the world we live in, so it’s everywhere. Go ahead and take apart your bike to figure out how it works. As soon as you start learning, you’ll want to know more — and if your parents get mad, send them my way.

Design Squad is a reality competition aimed at getting kids and people of all ages excited about engineering and the design process. In each episode Ball guides contestants as they take on challenges such as building cardboard furniture, hockey-net targets, and designing underwater prostheses for an amputee dancer. After graduating from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Ball cofounded Atlas Devices, maker of the Atlas Powered Rope Ascender, which lets military and rescue workers reverse-rappel up buildings at high speeds. The life-saving invention helped Ball earn the 2007 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize.

Click on any of the images below for a full-size view :

Rate / Comment on this Article

Post a comment

Be the first to comment on this article

Login to post a comment
Cine-Digitar 1.33x Anamorphic Lens
Home cinema has finally caught up to Hollywood, and Schneider Optics makes it possible. The Cine-Digitar Anamorphic 1.33x Lens System enables 16:9 digital projectors to fill the entire height and width of 2.35:1 format screens with cinema-quality images, eliminating the letterbox black bars that typically frame the image when a 16:9 projector with a conventional lens projects a Cinemascope movie....
Seismic Protection System
While woodframe structures have historically performed well with regard to life safety in regions of moderate to high seismicity, these types of low-rise structures have sustained significant structural and non-structural damage in recent earthquakes. This NEESWood project, funded by the National Science Foundation, seeks to take on the challenge of developing a seismic design philosophy that will...
Friction Pendulum Sliders
At Colorado State University, Prof. John van de Lindt has applied a base isolation system to a light-frame wood building for shake-table testing. The test structure is supported on a base isolation system consisting of four sliding bearings. The bearings are friction pendulum system (FPS) bearings that isolate the building from the earthquake ground motion by allowing the building to “slide” laterally...
Earthquake Shake Table
At Colorado State University, civil engineering professor Dr. John van de Lindt conducted a series of earthquake shake table tests of a half-scale two-story residential building with an integrated one car garage as part of a National Science Foundation funded NEESWood project task related to seismic protection systems. The overall goal of that task is to enable applications of protective systems...
LG90 HGTV 1,000,000:1 Contrast Ratio
The LG90 provides for the ultra-high 1,000,000:1 high contrast and LEDs that provide whiter whites and richer blacks with the added benefit of increased energy efficiency. LED backlighting also results in more natural color representation and faster response time for smoother, more natural picture motion. LG's Intelligent Sensor provides automatic image quality optimization of brightness and...
The blame game
I feel there was a glaring omission in Mr. Berke's May 25, 2006 column titled "For lack of a guard, a severed hand" — personal responsibility.
Shake, rattle, and modal analysis
FEA can be a useful tool for sizing up resonance problems.
Biomimetics could hold a key to next-generation body armor
Who would have thought that your wife's jewelry holds the secret to better body armor?
What's a mechatronics technician?
When Keith Campbell muses about industrial education, his thoughts go back to his uncle Ralph.
The meaning of bearing life
How long will a bearing last? Standardized life equations help to answer.
Engineering an ad
How do you convince a doubting public your truck is tough? You show them.
Tricked-Out Trucks
Stylists and engineers are exploring new ways to personalize pickup trucks, the best-selling type of vehicle in the U.S.
Tom-Thumb turbines power radio-controlled jets
Engineers have managed to shrink the modern jet engine until it is small enough to fit in model planes.
Engineering in India
Here’s a snapshot of the Indian engineers who increasingly compete for global manufacturing work.
Gulliver's Engines
Shrinking full-scale engines to pocket size is no small feat.
PRODUCT SEARCH
Powered by
SEARCH THE PLASTICS WEB™
Powered by
FORUMS
The effects of economic turmoil?
The news is full of market uncertainty, tight credit, and falling interest rates. Has the economic turmoil affected your work? Are you taking even more...

What’s Tough About Training
I have taught many Mechanial and Electrical Apprentices at a local company the basics and Trouble Shooting skills fr Fluid Power equipment. The classes...

Design Royalties
I was hired at my current position to maintain our machines. Outside of my general job duties I have built a new machine (with company funding) to...

Trustworthy engineer needed
Friends of mine have invented a clever, modular emergency shelter. They need a trustworthy engineer to make a 3D model of to make a prototype....

Dog clutch manufacturers
Can anyone recommend a reliable supplier for a part like the one shown here or on page 57 of Machine Design's Sept. 25 issue? Any suggestions greatly...