Abandon the profession
I failed with my oldest,
who is going to study chemical engineering
at U.C. Berkeley, and will
likely fail with my younger son, who
is showing brilliance in physics.
Why would I want to discourage
my kids from engineering? Simply
because it has so little clout in today’s
society. Lawyers and doctors and
business people have today’s clout
and financial success. An engineer
develops something profound, but
the corporation gets the patent rights
and the execs make all the money.
IEEE, ASME, and other such engineer
organizations are a joke compared
to the AMA or ABA. IEEE and
ASME should be a licensing bodies
like the AMA, commanding more
glory, power, and money for engineers.
Lawyers often charge $350/
hr for their services. How much do
engineers charge for theirs? Why the
discrepancy? I believe it is solely due
to the licensing structure and limits.
If we let doctors from other
countries come here and practice
unlicensed, what would happen to
our medical profession? If a lawyer
from any country could come
here and practice law as they saw
fit, what would happen to the legal
profession? Yet, we do this with engineers
all the time, driving down
salaries, respect, and clout. Why?
I encouraged my kids to go into
any other profession other than engineering
for these reasons. Engineers
are the Rodney Dangerfields
of all the professions.
Bobbie Panelli
Isn’t it ironic that while Asia is overstating
the credentials of their “engineers,”
the U.S. is disregarding the
importance of its own homegrown
designers and engineers (“Want to
compete globally? Education isn’t
enough,” Feb. 21)?
Design engineering used to be
considered the top of the engineering
pyramid in many of our leading
corporations. Now we are too
often referred to by that loathsome
term, “CAD operators.”
And I blame advances in CAD
for much of engineering’s decline. As
recently as 10 years ago, I directed a
group of about four or five designers
and drafters as the Product Design
Engineer. But as solid modeling
moved to the PC, I happily found
myself doing my own modeling.
Unfortunately, these software advances
made the job look easy and
I have found that managers have
developed the mistaken idea that
product design is a lesser-valued
skill than say, project planning or
other nondesign activities.
Although I love design engineering,
I have considered moving back
into full-time project engineering (a
lower skill in my opinion) to regain
my old reputation.
Of course, it doesn’t help that the
Chinese and Indians have a bunch of
low-cost CAD guys posing as
high level design engineers.
W.C. Pezza
Green Mercury?
Green is good, if it stays green. If you
listen to all sides, CFLs are boon or
bust (“Are CFLs really a bright idea?”
Jan. 24). If you listen to most in Congress,
they will be hard pressed to explain
what they voted for. The irony
is that it would be so much harder
to sell the CFLs if they were called
by their real name, mercury vapor
lights. I will not take sides with cost,
life, or aesthetics. But I urge you to
remember that mercury pollution
was and still is, a principal concern. I
am not a chemist, but we should ask
the question: Where are we going
to put the average 5 mg of mercury
from each of these bulbs? Have we
forgotten mercury poisoning, birth
defects, dead fish in rivers, and recent
toys recalls? What do we really know
about the fluorescent bulbs and what
is released when they break? Sure, power plants also pollute, but we
have some control over single-point
sources. But there’s little we can do
about broken bulbs in the trash or on
the streets. Has the EPA fallen asleep
at the switch?
Peter Ronay
Credit where credit is due
Photo credits for the two images in
the March 20 issue were mixed up.
The drum caption photo (page 45)
should be Courtesy of Cyclone Aviation
Products and the end effector
image (page 48) should be Courtesy
of CPS Technology Corp.
EDM no-no
I’ve been reading Machine Design
for sometime now and I generally
find the magazine quite interesting.
Some are more interesting than others,
as with the recent issue (April
10). On the very last page, I noticed
a rather interesting technical
glitch. Specifically, the small item
on Artistic EDM states that “electrically conductive materials cannot
be EDMed.” Interesting, given that
electrical discharge is fundamental
to the technique, and won’t occur
with nonconductive materials. Perhaps
that is a minor point, but I just
“had” to comment.
Dave Wakefield
I just read in the latest issue where
“electrically conductive materials
cannot be EDMed”. I believe you
mean nonconductive material
such as various grades of plastic
materials, i.e., nylon, acetal , vinyl,
polyethylene, and similar materials.
EDM will spark-erode any material
that conducts electricity. Examples
would be steel, copper, aluminum,
and especially materials
commonly used in making tooling
for plastic and die casting.
William Frank
It’s a gas, man
In the article on heat exchangers
(Scanning the Field, April 10), the editor uses the phrase “One fluid
(or gas) . . “ The word fluid is nonrestrictive
to liquids and it destroys
our language’s nuances to not use
the word fluid when that is what
is meant. Check any decent dictionary.
There was also an article
several months ago in your magazine
regarding tension-indicating
bolt heads. It also used the word
fluid when was really meant was
liquid. And you are not alone. The
medical profession is forever talking
about the problems of having
fluid in your lungs. My lungs are
always filled with fluid since the
atmosphere we breathe is a fluid,
more precisely. It is a gas.
Please join with me against this
erosion of the English language and
use the right word rather than muddying
the meaning by using imprecise
words. In short, If you mean
liquid, use liquid, and if you mean
liquid or gas, use the term fluid.
Robert H. Russel
Gadget Guesses
That is a ship.
Leo
It appears to be a guided-missile
cruiser.
James
A dual RIM-2 Terrier or RIM-8
Talos sur face-to-air missile launcher on afterdeck of a U.S.
Navy warship, circa late 1960s.
Jack
The picture looks like a PT boat
that was used in World War II in
the Pacific, the type of boat John F.
Kennedy served on.
Tim
Name that gadget
Be the first to identify this vehicle from
a past issue of Machine Design and
win a fabulous prize, along with the
honor of seeing your name in an upcoming
issue. E-mail entries to stephenmraz@penton.com and put “Gadget” in the subject line.
At least two readers knew the last gadget was
the Gearing-Class destroyer, DDG Gyatt
(DDG-1), the first guided-missile destroyer.
But the first reader (by lesss than 2 hours)
with the correct answer was Jonn Krell.