Stupid Things I Have Done

   / Stupid Things I Have Done #612  
Well I did something thing(s) stupid.
I remember what a friend said when we were kids: "everything you do takes 5 minutes or 5 hours, no exception". The temperature sensor was bad on an engine and when I replaced it that last little tweak snapped it off. Thankfully a screw extractor got it out. I ordered one shipped overnight and in a hurry to install dropped it...but where? After taking radiator, fan, pulleys, etc. off I spotted it inside harmonic balancer, last place I looked. Small forceps got it out.
Installed it works fine.
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   / Stupid Things I Have Done #615  
Often the answer is you need to know the answers to the simple stuff, And that there are answer, and how to find them, for the more complex stuff. In my work, there are 1000s of pages of spec, and you don't need to know the exact detail; although for stuff you do daily, you really should. On stuff that maybe comes up 1/month, you should be pretty sure What the answer is, and where to find the details of that answer.

The problem comes when someone either A; doesn't know that there is an answer, so assumes it doesn't existing or
B; kinda knows in general there is an answer, but doesn't know the details or how to find them; and pull answers out of their butt
I've run into that latter when dealing with new engineers when working oil field.

I rent water pumps and related items.

We had an oil field customer (new engineer, fresh out of college) that was put in charge of setting up his first water transfer.

He sends over this huge list of fittings they need for this job. Quite a bit of it we had to purchase, so my boss worked it out with them that we would supply the items for purchase.

Me, getting all this stuff together, and being part of these jobs before, I had a pretty good idea what they were trying to do.

So when I took them all the items they ordered, plus the equipment, I also threw on a couple manifolds we had built and rented for similar applications.

So I get to the jobsite, and sure enough, I was right and those manifold would work perfectly for the job.

So.... I sell them all the fittings they ordered, plus rented them the manifolds that I brought along, since the employees stated we're gonna use the manifolds since they could tie into them with a short hose and be up and running.

The engineer learned a lesson that day. Instead of trying to figure it out all on your own, consult the folks that do it on a daily basis. Chances are good they have done similar before and can come up with a quick solution.
 
   / Stupid Things I Have Done #616  
Anyone here play along with Jeopardy? Wife and I do several times a week. Pretty fun.
That channel fades in and out too much at my place.

I have an antennae for local TV.
 
   / Stupid Things I Have Done #617  
We never miss a new show! We don’t watch the celebrity version!
It will be interesting to see how, Ryan Seacrest does as the new host!
I thought Seacrest is the new host of wheel of fortune???
 
   / Stupid Things I Have Done #620  
I've run into that latter when dealing with new engineers when working oil field.

I rent water pumps and related items.

We had an oil field customer (new engineer, fresh out of college) that was put in charge of setting up his first water transfer.

He sends over this huge list of fittings they need for this job. Quite a bit of it we had to purchase, so my boss worked it out with them that we would supply the items for purchase.

Me, getting all this stuff together, and being part of these jobs before, I had a pretty good idea what they were trying to do.

So when I took them all the items they ordered, plus the equipment, I also threw on a couple manifolds we had built and rented for similar applications.

So I get to the jobsite, and sure enough, I was right and those manifold would work perfectly for the job.

So.... I sell them all the fittings they ordered, plus rented them the manifolds that I brought along, since the employees stated we're gonna use the manifolds since they could tie into them with a short hose and be up and running.

The engineer learned a lesson that day. Instead of trying to figure it out all on your own, consult the folks that do it on a daily basis. Chances are good they have done similar before and can come up with a quick solution.
There are a lot of things that separate a good engineer from most, and near the top of that short list are:

1. Wrench-turners. If you were the kid fixing everyone's bicycles at age 13, and then all of your friends' cars at age 17... you're going to be a better than average engineer.

2. Talk to the production and service folks. If your short list of best friends don't include the people who've been producing and servicing the product for 20-30 years, you're doomed to repeat all the mistakes of the past.

3. Work in manufacturing, or if you don't have the chance to do it, at least hang out there. E.g., if you're designing machined parts, you'd better have a pretty good idea of how the machinist is going to fixture and mill or turn that part, so you don't come up with designs sensitive to tolerances they can never hope to hold.
 

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