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Old 10-24-2022, 08:03 PM   #1
jeffmorris
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Before invention of computer aid drafting?

I have been watching old films made by Fisher Bodies for General Motors. When they made plans for a new car, a lot of people have to work together to make sure that the new car can be built without any problems. Before invention of computer aid drafting, how can they do that?
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Old 10-25-2022, 09:59 AM   #2
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

Engineering degree, paper, pencil, slide rule and maybe a calculator. Just look at history. We think how did they build that without modern tools? Necessity is the mother of invention.
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Old 10-27-2022, 09:37 AM   #3
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

Cars are child's play, and not usually considered the pinnacle of engineering prowess except to those afflicted by the marketing hype of people selling those crappy examples of engineering.

Research the design development of the Saturn launch vehicle and Apollo spacecraft. It went to the moon and back nine times (even mission 13), with seven of them landing and leaving from there. There was no 3D CAD or even 2D CAD, only hand-drafted projections and views. There were no computational fluid dynamics, just astute review and calculation.

Just after the end of that program, IBM began thinking about a system called "CADRA" which ran on a dedicated IBM microchannel computer (since it was a faster interface than a PC or anything built in someone's garage). By the early '80s it was ready for deployment. A lot of impressive engineering was done long before the 1980s.

It was also a time when an engineering degree was not peeled from the bottom of a Rice Krispies box, but had to be earned.
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Old 10-27-2022, 11:12 AM   #4
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Cool Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

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Cars are child's play, and not usually considered the pinnacle of engineering prowess except to those afflicted by the marketing hype of people selling those crappy examples of engineering.

Research the design development of the Saturn launch vehicle and Apollo spacecraft. It went to the moon and back nine times (even mission 13), with seven of them landing and leaving from there. There was no 3D CAD or even 2D CAD, only hand-drafted projections and views. There were no computational fluid dynamics, just astute review and calculation.

Just after the end of that program, IBM began thinking about a system called "CADRA" which ran on a dedicated IBM microchannel computer (since it was a faster interface than a PC or anything built in someone's garage). By the early '80s it was ready for deployment. A lot of impressive engineering was done long before the 1980s.

It was also a time when an engineering degree was not peeled from the bottom of a Rice Krispies box, but had to be earned.
I would say that actual engineering went into the design and construction of automobiles from before around 2000.

After that, a blend of engineering and asethics/ cosmetic values, began. Today's cars - the outward appearance anyway - see to be mostly about looks: the tractor-trailer sized wheels wrapped in thin rubber bands of tires, door sill - to- side window ratios that render the side windows as gun slits, the high rear- low nose aesthetic that has us scraping the latter whenever we pull into Burger King, church, or our own driveway.

Very little engineering seems to go into the drivers perspective nowadays - the view out of the vehicle from the drivers seat. I'm 5'7(lost one inch since high school graduation), and I have to elevate the seat all the way up to get the same downward view I used to get out of everything from a Ford Pinto to a 1970 DeVille! Are people today really that much huger? I want to see TRAFFIC when I look out my left and right windows at a busy cross road, not the 'carefully crafted and stitch patterns' in the interior door panels!

And forget the view aft - turning around and looking out the back window is like looking up at the north star!

Instead, "engineers" have placed cameras on the front and rear bumpers, to aid our outward vision in these rolling fashion models!
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Old 10-27-2022, 12:47 PM   #5
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

There's still a lot of engineering that goes into many of the designs that you consider as "aesthetics." Many of those design "choices" are driven by safety requirements, and a lot of engineering goes into implementing the safety standards. Large wheels are needed for large brake packages. Tall sides are to improve side crash survival rates and to help hide bracing and crumple zones. Low noses are to reduce the death rate when hitting pedestrians, motorcyclists, and bicyclists because the driver's are too busy looking at their phones and other distractions.

Yeah, there's possibly less engineering focus on the driver's visibility and more focus on the driver's comfort, features, and safety of the driver and the public. That's part of why I get so frustrated with the media trying so hard to condemn Tesla's driver-assistance systems. How are engineers supposed to improve on these systems if companies are continually encouraged to not implement or further develop the systems because the media wants to hold Tesla (or any other manufacturer) responsible for injuries due to the driver's abuse of the features, which gets expensive and could easily discourage a company from attempting to further develop these systems? If used properly these systems have potential to save hundreds or thousands of lives. What's next, gun manufacturers will be help responsible for shootings when someone abuses their product? Oh, wait....

-Rod
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Old 10-27-2022, 01:57 PM   #6
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Cool Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

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There's still a lot of engineering that goes into many of the designs that you consider as "aesthetics." Many of those design "choices" are driven by safety requirements, and a lot of engineering goes into implementing the safety standards. Large wheels are needed for large brake packages. Tall sides are to improve side crash survival rates and to help hide bracing and crumple zones. Low noses are to reduce the death rate when hitting pedestrians, motorcyclists, and bicyclists because the driver's are too busy looking at their phones and other distractions.

Yeah, there's possibly less engineering focus on the driver's visibility and more focus on the driver's comfort, features, and safety of the driver and the public. That's part of why I get so frustrated with the media trying so hard to condemn Tesla's driver-assistance systems. How are engineers supposed to improve on these systems if companies are continually encouraged to not implement or further develop the systems because the media wants to hold Tesla (or any other manufacturer) responsible for injuries due to the driver's abuse of the features, which gets expensive and could easily discourage a company from attempting to further develop these systems? If used properly these systems have potential to save hundreds or thousands of lives. What's next, gun manufacturers will be help responsible for shootings when someone abuses their product? Oh, wait....

-Rod
1. Aesthetics. I don't know how having a lower nose contributes to saving the life of a pedestrian hit by a car or such.

2. Drivers visibility - call me pragmatic, but the first order of business when it comes to vehicle safey is being able to see outside of it, in all directions. No cameras or sensors can ever fully supplant that property.

3. Autonomous Teslas: Do you believe that every instance of a Tesla Motors vehicle driving into a restaurant, or out of control in traffic, is somehow the fault of its driver?
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Old 10-27-2022, 03:26 PM   #7
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

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3. Autonomous Teslas: Do you believe that every instance of a Tesla Motors vehicle driving into a restaurant, or out of control in traffic, is somehow the fault of its driver?
It's absolutely the fault of the driver because they aren't doing what they are supposed to be doing and paying attention to what the car is doing.
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Old 10-27-2022, 06:27 PM   #8
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It's absolutely the fault of the driver because they aren't doing what they are supposed to
be doing and paying attention to what the car is doing.
Not always. What if a sensor goes whacky and the Tesla brakes or steers suddenly when no such input is required for the present circumstance.

Is the driver now responsible for routine testing of the myriad sensors required in an autonomous vehicle, in addition to monthly tire pressure checks, etc?
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Old 10-27-2022, 09:51 PM   #9
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

The driver is responsible, always. No what ifs, no buts, the driver is supposed to be paying attention and take over if anything goes sideways.
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Old 10-27-2022, 10:01 PM   #10
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The driver is responsible, always. No what ifs, no buts, the driver is supposed to be paying attention and take over if anything goes sideways.
Well if that's the case, then I'll just leave the fuckin Tesla at home, and use a car that I have to drive myself!
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Old 10-27-2022, 10:26 PM   #11
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

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Well if that's the case, then I'll just leave the fuckin Tesla at home, and use a car that I have to drive myself!
I'm 100% with you on that. I don't trust the "self-driving" crap anyway and I have zero love for electric cars.
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Old 10-28-2022, 01:15 PM   #12
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

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I'm 100% with you on that. I don't trust the "self-driving" crap anyway and I have zero love for electric cars.
I don't fully trust the self-driving features, but I still trust that as a nice addition in cars that these days tend to be driven by people more interested in the text message on their phone than on the traffic around them. Similar to auto braking systems, I think there's good potential and value in continuing to develop and improve the technology, but I will need to be SEVERAL years older before I want to give up as the primary operator of my vehicles.

I don't like the tremendous push to ban ICE vehicles in favor of all-electric vehicles (or any other power source) that our infrastructure and environment is not equipped to fully deal with. But as an electrical engineer and someone who's enjoyed R/C cars as a child, and enjoys my children's enjoyment of R/C cars, I do think there is a place for all-electric cars. I just don't think they should be the only option.

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Old 10-28-2022, 01:17 PM   #13
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

Eeek, I guess I've been a bit guilty of causing this thread to get off topic....
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Old 10-28-2022, 02:31 PM   #14
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I'm 100% with you on that. I don't trust the "self-driving" crap anyway and I have zero love for electric cars.
But the fact that you would hold the driver of said self-driver 100% responsible for anything afoul that happens with it, even an undiscovered factory defect, muddies your position.

By that same logic, it’s the driver’s fault the Ford Pinto exploded from being rear-ended - simply because they bought it, and drove it in traffic!

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Old 10-28-2022, 09:45 PM   #15
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Re: Before invention of computer aid drafting?

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But the fact that you would hold the driver of said self-driver 100% responsible for anything afoul that happens with it, even an undiscovered factory defect, muddies your position.

By that same logic, it’s the driver’s fault the Ford Pinto exploded from being rear-ended - simply because they bought it, and drove it in traffic!
That's the dumbest take ever. Dumbest.
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