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- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Path: sparky!uunet!krfiny!jeffj
- From: jeffj@krfiny.uucp (J. Jonas)
- Subject: Re: Craftsmanship is dying
- Message-ID: <1992Aug12.202819.23364@krfiny.uucp>
- Summary: well, yes and no
- Organization: Jeff's house of computer pieces
- References: <MOTOYAMA.92Aug11183427@harlgw92.harl.hitachi> <1992Aug11.212327.449@cbfsb.cb.att.com>
- Date: Wed, 12 Aug 1992 20:28:19 GMT
- Lines: 54
-
- With a heavy sigh I agree that overall, craftsmanship is dying.
- I have taken apart electrical appliances since my teens and it's getting less
- and less satisfying. Taking apart a big tube TV was a wonderful puzzle
- of interlocking parts, large chassis and spaghetti wiring.
- A lot of hand work.
- I took apart a VCR recently. It snapped apart, the case being
- mostly plastic. Where was the fun in that?
- There was very little I could salvage. Too many application specific parts.
-
- Taking apart old IBM computers was fascinating. I really admired all
- the man hours that went into making those machines: the wire cables
- were all LACED (anybody remember nylon lacing cord and the appropriate knots?).
- It was extremely labor intensive.
- The tubular steel frames were indestructable.
- I still have the large core planes from the IBM 1620 and 1130.
-
- I have the WOOD cases from lab equipment such as a GE Oscillograph,
- turbidimeter, and an inductance bridge. Wonderful hardwood cases
- with furniture quality woods, finishes and hardware.
-
- But on the down side, all that equipment took a hefty chunk of
- your budget back then.
- It's sad to see an EE lab where all the equipment is in cheap
- plastic cases, or aluminum cases at best.
- It is a small comfort that the new equipment takes a smaller
- percentage of the budget, is significantly LESS expensive,
- HARDER to break and much more available.
- But I'd rather have 2-3 new oscilloscopes than one older one.
- Even if the older one's better, increasing availability is
- a good thing. Mass producing even test equipment has put
- equipment that was unaffordable only a few years ago
- into the hands of many more engineers and technicians.
- Overall, that's a good thing.
-
- If computers were still hand made, the prices would still be
- astronomical. The PC 'revolution' was not just the pioneers
- that were hand wiring their own computers but the ability to
- mass produce the parts and make PCs a commodity.
- Just go to a computer show and see the hundreds of tables with
- PC compatible motherboards and peripherals, all competitively priced
- (although most are no-name manufacturers from Taiwan, Korea or Japan).
- Such things were possible before.
-
- I'm saddened by the collapse of the surplus market and the disinterest
- in quality built equipment, but that's progress (so they say).
-
- - Jeffrey Jonas
- jeffj@synsys.uucp
- synsys!jeffj@uunet.uu.net
- --
- --
- Jeffrey Jonas
-
- jeffj@synsys.uucp
-