Those #+%^ engineers!

   / Those #+%^ engineers! #112  
The schedule in the automotive market is brutal, with a need to release new models each fall probably routinely cutting short development efforts and debug time on new designs.
Might have been true once, but unless there's a major revision, modern vehicles don't change all that much from one model year to the next.
 
   / Those #+%^ engineers! #113  
I bet it's really hard to pull start a larger 20+hp 4 stroke with or without a decompression valve imo.

I have a 2006 Yamaha Kodiak ATV. 450cc - and it has a pull starter in addition to the electric start. Twice in the 20 years I've owned it I've had to use the pull starter because the battery broke. Yes, broke - I could get juice by tapping on either the positive or negative terminal but otherwise no power. No compression release. Procedure was to bring the engine up to the compression stroke, crouch down, and then stand up while holding the arms straight. No way I had enough strength to "pull" start the engine just by pulling with my arms. Luckily the Yamaha was a real easy starter - one revolution of the engine, hot or cold, and it will start and idle. And it doesn't need the battery to run once the engine is running.
 
   / Those #+%^ engineers! #114  
When I was an engineer for the government, all servicing had to be taken into consideration
A while back there was a big to-do about the price of things such as hammers in the Defense Department. Could this be a reason? I imagine that something used to pound nails all day would be a high maintenance item. :unsure:😕😆😖🤓

I know, this isn't the "Groan" thread. I'll show myself out now.
 
   / Those #+%^ engineers! #115  
Aww well..an engineer speaking here, once chief designer at a now defunct wheel loader manufacturer, then R&D engineer at a slurry applicator manufacturer, and after an accident with nasty brain injury, engineer at a company that builds truck superstructures such as container systems and cranes.

You can nag and whine all you want, but when the plan is made on the shop floor, it will always be more expensive than to fully engineer it. Because paper is more forgiving than steel (although i understand that there are "engineers" out there that never seen practice...)
 
   / Those #+%^ engineers! #116  
I bet it's really hard to pull start a larger 20+hp 4 stroke with or without a decompression valve imo. Quick backwoods hack I've used is remove screen guard on flywheel put a high torque drill with socket on flywheel nut it and use that as a starter with caution.
That's for sure.
Around 1990 I had a 115 hp Mercury outboard boat motor. It had electric start and a pull rope. I tried starting it while parked in my garage. Even standing on the ground I couldn't pull that rope. So I put some jumper cables it the boat...it had 2 batteries up front for the trolling motor.
 
   / Those #+%^ engineers! #117  
A while back there was a big to-do about the price of things such as hammers in the Defense Department. Could this be a reason? I imagine that something used to pound nails all day would be a high maintenance item. :unsure:😕😆😖🤓

I know, this isn't the "Groan" thread. I'll show myself out now.
Having worked as an engineer in a defense industry, I know something about this. The problem wasn't the design, it was the inflexible standards and the procurement process. If an item needed 4 bolts we had to require full material certification and traceability. Eventually we made some progress in being able to buy larger quantities to maintain in stock but many things are one of a kind.
 
   / Those #+%^ engineers! #118  
I spent much of my career in the EMC industry, which was nearly all commercial prior to 2008, and then became more and more about military equipment hardening thereafter. We would routinely have to charge several times more for any military project than for the exact same hardware going into commercial applications, due to the small internal army we'd have to build to satisfy all of their documentation requirements. You could almost figure on doubling the total man-hours for military, over our usual commercial applications.

And all of that was just for domestic testing facilities. I can't even imagine the documentation and testing requirements if we were designing or building hardware for actual deployment. The stuff I design is used for testing tanks, jets, bombs, and missiles... but it doesn't go into tanks, jets, bombs, or missiles.
 
   / Those #+%^ engineers! #119  
My son is a ticketed millwright. About fifteen years ago,while living in Vancouver B.C., his company sent him somewhere in Texas to either make or assemble some equipment that was necessary in the production of a new fighter jet. Apparently the military specified the millwright ticket and no US citizens were available for the work with the required designation or no such designation existed for the ticket.
 
   / Those #+%^ engineers! #120  
So, the guys building stuff complain about engineers, and often rightly so, but the number of guys that dont actually understand the big picture, that might be good at their trade is high.

Anyone who has done any form of QC/Inspection has heard something along these lines, "we have never had trouble with density before, we just put 3 ft of fill and tire roll it twice and it passes everytime" or "water doesnt hurt concrete, it hardens underwater, adding 40 gallons to the truck is fine"; "ive never failed an x-ray, that weld is perfect".

I dont really think company's really build in an intent for the product to fail, but everything is this world is built with a design life. In my line of work, short design life is 25 years, and much is 50+ years; but very little is designed to make it easier to replace later.

If you look at vehicles, the life span is Way better, components and the whole thing, but no, they aren't spending too much R&D budget on ease/time/cost of repair
 

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