You know that feeling you get when you see an operator constantly checking and re-checking what is probably the LEAST important feature on a part... SMH
(I tried just posting this in a metrology forum, but no one responded... are they actually working on Friday afternoon or what?!?! (As I hammer out a program, lol...)
Well the head engineer guy, when I ask him about a formula, he explained that the engineering school in Milwaukee, said there was no need to know the formulas, that they are imbedded in the program. Yikes. Careful
PacMan23 with the profile subject. That's not a good one to argue.
Well the head engineer guy, when I ask him about a formula, he explained that the engineering school in Milwaukee, said there was no need to know the formulas, that they are imbedded in the program. Yikes. Careful
PacMan23 with the profile subject. That's not a good one to argue.
half of the time I spend at work involves programming and measuring parts, the other half is spent explaining where the part failed, why its failing and what we should do in order to fix it.
[sarcasm]My favorite thing to do at work is other people's jobs for them[/sarcasm]
Seriously though if they actually did their jobs I'd be out of one :P
If you are talking about MSOE (Milwaukee school of eng.), GD&T is not required for mechanical design eng. degree.
At least it was not when I had argument with one of their professors few years back, on my visit to Grohman museum at their campus.
He claimed that is drafters job not engineers. Lets just say that my volume level was not appropriate for museum environment after this comment