HAPPY NATIONAL ENGINEER'S WEEK, EVERYONE!
Which one?
Nauga,
and the singularity of it all
I was once at a picnic where I was introduced to the head of a college orchestra. Pointed out we had both an engineer and a conductor.....I didn't know you drove a train...
Edison would hand new engineers the glass envelope from an electric light, and ask them what the internal volume was. They'd spend hours with calipers and calculations.When I was a teenager I spent a couple of summers in Alaska with my grandpa, who rented an apartment to a civil engineer (I think) who was in town for a project. He said his dad liked to ask new-hire engineers to figure out how much concrete he’d need for his sidewalk project…it usually came out to several truckloads.![]()
I half expected my (firstborn) daughter to become an engineer, but she ended up as a middle school science teacher. Close enough?Some did a study and found that women physical scientists at the time were overwhelmingly daughters of... engineers. (We were also overwhelmingly first children, but that's another story. Or not.)
I love engineers.
In this day and age, are we still allowed to sing the song?HAPPY NATIONAL ENGINEER'S WEEK, EVERYONE!
Before engineers, things were often much worse than over-engineered, they were just not engineered at all and as a result were horribly overbuilt.and without engineers, we wouldn't have this thread - https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/community/threads/na-over-engineered-improvements.150462/
lol. Where to start, anecdote vs data or discuss a common sentiment of “things aren’t made the way they used to be”?In this day and age, are we still allowed to sing the song?
Before engineers, things were often much worse than over-engineered, they were just not engineered at all and as a result were horribly overbuilt.
For example, I once did some work on an old house that had a *14-inch-thick* solid concrete wall running across the basement. Way more structure than necessary. I needed to bore a 4-inch hole through it, took me 5 hours with a big two-handed Milwaukee hammer drill. Ugh.
Another example: There was a local building that needed to come down. It was maybe a dozen stories high and rectangular, and it had concrete walls on the edges and giant concrete columns in the middle. They wanted it to fall along its long axis, so they put explosives in three of the walls (both long and one short) and all of the columns a couple floors above ground. I heard about it and went down to watch. Law enforcement cleared the area, a siren sounded, there was a countdown and a bunch of explosions as they blew the walls and columns to bits.
The fourth wall held up the entire building. For a week. After which they just added more explosives to it to finally bring the thing down.