acbytesla
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2012
- Messages
- 39,468
OK, in all fairness BS.There's plenty of blame to go around. You and I might want to pick and choose, but our choices are limited to what engineers have made available to us. In many case they were not justfollowing ordersworking for hire, but developed innovations without being told to and even self-promoted them. Management will often go with it simply because the novelty may attract customers looking for something different, or because they respect the engineer's vision. OTOH management may have ideas of their own that don't come to fruition because the engineers don't like it. You may say that's the fault of management for not hiring the 'right' engineers, but when the industry is full of Luddite engineers what choice do they have?
Real engineers aren't just machines that just take in a specification and spit out a design, they are people just like you and me.Their own desires often factor bigly in what they come up with, and then we are stuck with those choices. Of course our decisions have impact too, but they are constrained by what is made available to us.
As in politics, it often comes down to the lesser of two evils. In the 1890's New York city had a big problem - horse manure. What ultimately solved it was the motor car, a far cleaner mode of personal transport. Electric cars were initially very popular in the city because they were quiet, low maintenance, easy to use (particularly for women who didn't want to risk breaking an arm or worse trying to start them) and didn't need an exotic fuel.
But then the electric starter motor was invented by Charles F. Kettering an American engineer who founded Delco and was head of R&D at General Motors from 1920 to 1947. Kettering didn't have to do that.
He could have worked on making electric vehicles better instead. But he was a petrol-head. Kettering's lack of concern about the environment led (pun intended) to him identifying tetraethyllead as an anti-knocking compound, precipitating one of the largest environmental disasters iin the history of mankind. How many of us used leaded petrol in our cars, blissfully unaware of the damage it was causing? An engineer was responsible for that.
Kettering made an electric, motor which is what an electric starter is. Electric cars actually predate Kettering's tenure at GM by 30 years. The problem in developing a practical electric vehicle wasn't solved by making better electric motors, but because better batteries were built. And that wasn't until Stanley Whittingham developed the first lithium intercalation battery at Exxon in 1972, and John Goodenough later discovered that lithium cobalt oxide could serve as a stable cathode material. And it stll took 19 years before a practical rechargeable lithium battery was first put into production by Sony.
Kettering was an engineer. Not really a research scientist which is necessary for engineers to build on.