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Understanding Engineers [Humor]
Email from an Engineer Friend ^ | 2-27-02 | Anon.

Posted on 02/27/2002 4:20:00 AM PST by Pharmboy

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To: Pharmboy
I'm married to an engineer.
His latest hobby - building free PC's. He buys all the parts on the net. Often better than free after rebate. He likes to buy two of everything. Then he sells one on EBay to someone in Canada for twice what you would pay at the local Best Buy.
It makes me nuts! We don't even need a fourth PC! My den and dining room are covered with dismembered machines. Once a month I sit down at the computer and my links are gone or my programs don't work because he's monkeyed with it.
41 posted on 02/27/2002 7:18:10 AM PST by The Game Hen
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To: Sword_of_Gideon
I have a friend who is an engineer. She fools everyone, though, because right now she is an at-home mom. Her husband does not know diddlesquat about how anything runs. Vendors who come into their home for repairs refuse to talk with her unless the husband is present. She gets frustrated, but she and her husband have learned to enjoy the show after everything becomes apparent. They also have developed a good sense of humor.
42 posted on 02/27/2002 7:19:45 AM PST by twigs
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To: The Game Hen
my links are gone or my programs don't work because he's monkeyed with it.

That would drive me nuts. Fortunately, my husband knows as little as I do about this. You need a laptop that goes somewhere with a key that only you keep!

43 posted on 02/27/2002 7:21:30 AM PST by twigs
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To: WIMom
Loved "The Knack" and have sent it on to my engineers. Now I'm probably in trouble with all of them!
44 posted on 02/27/2002 7:22:40 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: Pharmboy
I've seen 'em before, and more, but it's funny how physicists and engineers go about solving problems... I was helping an eng bud of mine out with some physics homework and it was hilarious to observe our styles--

Max: Okay so well doo-doo-doo, uh, energy goes like one over wavelength so wavelength goes like one over potential and just plug a few rough numbers in here, h is about 1 times ten to the minus 34, yeah, so order of magnitude here's yer answer dude...

Bud: Hmmmmmmmmrrrggghhh energy equals Planck's constant times the speed of light in vacuum divided by wavelength, right? Lemme look that up. So h, Planck's constant, is 6.63[blah blah blah] times ten to the minus 34 power, and that's in Joules so I have to convert it to flabs per quadrupic centipedes, blah-dee blah-dee blah, where's my calculator, wait I missed a significant digit, wait how the hell does potential come into this?

Bwahaha... Engineers have no vision of the bigger picture. That's all I got to say. Thermo? Thermodynamics is PV = nRT to us, dude...

45 posted on 02/27/2002 7:22:45 AM PST by maxwell
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To: twigs
Actually I do have a laptop for that reason. (He got it for a great deal!) Unfortunately, the battery went bad and he won't get me a new battery because he can't find a bargain. I'll have to sneak down to Best Buy and pay retail. (gasp!)
46 posted on 02/27/2002 7:25:32 AM PST by The Game Hen
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To: Pharmboy
Chem. E. bump

Chemical Engineers do it in Packed Beds.

47 posted on 02/27/2002 7:27:43 AM PST by Sloth
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To: The Game Hen
My den and dining room are covered with dismembered machines.

That's nothing. Mine kept a dismantled Model A car in my entry hall for a couple of years! (Just all of the parts -- the shell of the body and the chassis were in the garage. Still, it was a lot of stuff in and out of boxes.) I was ordered to not touch it under any circumstances. It gradually made it's way to the garage, piece by piece, however; and he didn't even notice for a while. We're still married.

I remember one time the Mayor of the town stopped by when my husband had the washing machine taken apart all over the kitchen. He looked at me in astonishment and exclaimed, "You let him do that kind of stuff in the house?" "Try and stop him," was my answer.

48 posted on 02/27/2002 7:29:04 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: The Game Hen
I had an engineer that worked for me that created and utilized a PERT schedule (a computerized schedule. much like a Critical Path Method schedule) to plan his and his fiances wedding.

It actually worked, but I imagine the wife's mother about had a heart attack.

49 posted on 02/27/2002 7:29:10 AM PST by KC Burke
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To: Pharmboy
Ahhhh...so now we know why Old Henry wasn't fond of Jews. ;-)

Well, he paid the bill!

50 posted on 02/27/2002 7:31:15 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: Pharmboy
Why Engineers Don't Write Cookbooks

Chocolate Chip Cookies:
Ingredients:
1.) 532.35 cm3 gluten
2.) 4.9 cm3 NaHCO3
3.) 4.9 cm3 refined halite
4.) 236.6 cm3 partially hydrogenated tallow triglyceride
5.) 177.45 cm3 crystalline C12H22O11
6.) 177.45 cm3 unrefined C12H22O11
7.) 4.9 cm3 methyl ether of protocatechuic aldehyde
8.) Two calcium carbonate-encapsulated avian albumen-coated protein
9.) 473.2 cm3 theobroma cacao
10.) 236.6 cm3 de-encapsulated legume meats (sieve size #10)

To a 2-L jacketed round reactor vessel (reactor #1) with an overall
heat transfer coefficient of about 100 Btu/F-ft2-hr, add ingredients
one, two and three with constant agitation. In a second 2-L reactor
vessel with a radial flow impeller operating at 100 rpm, add
ingredients four, five, six, and seven until the mixture is
homogenous. To reactor #2, add ingredient eight, followed by three
equal volumes of the homogenous mixture in reactor #1. Additionally,
add ingredient nine and ten slowly, with constant agitation. Care
must be taken at this point in the reaction to control any temperature
rise that may be the result of an exothermic reaction. Using a screw
extrude attached to a #4 nodulizer, place the mixture piecemeal on a
316SS sheet (300 x 600 mm). Heat in a 460K oven for a period of time
that is in agreement with Frank & Johnston's first order rate
expression (see JACOS, 21, 55), or until golden brown. Once the
reaction is complete, place the sheet on a 25C heat-transfer table,
allowing the product to come to equilibrium.

51 posted on 02/27/2002 7:32:25 AM PST by Washington-Husky
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To: Sloth
Physics bump... We learn this stuff in Intro Electrodynamics. ;)

One night when his charge was pretty high, Micro-Farad decided to seek out a cute little coil to help him discharge.

He picked up Milli-Amp and took her for a ride in his Megacycle. They rode across the Wheatstone Bridge and stopped by a Magnetic field with flowing currents and frolicked in the sine waves.

Micro-Farad, attracted by Millie-Amp's characterisic curves soon had her fully charged and proceeded to excite her resistance to a minimum. He gently laid her at ground potential, raised her frequency and lowered her reluctance.

With a quick arc, he pulled out his high voltage probe and inserted it in her socket, connecting them in parallel. He slowly began short circuiting her resistance shunt while quickly raising her thermal conductance level to mil-spec. Fully excited, Milli- Amp mumbled "MHO...MHO...MHO"

With his tube operating well into class C, and her field vibrating with his current flow, a corona formed which instantly caused her shunt to overheat just at the point when Micro-Farad rapidly discharged and drained off every electron into her grid.

They fluxed all night trying various connectors and sockets untill his magnet had a soft core and lost all of its field strength.

Afterwards, Milli-Amp tried self-induction and damaged her solenoids and with his battery fully discharged, Micro-Farad was unable to excite his field. Not ready to be quiescent, they spent the rest of the evening reversing polarity and blowing each others fuses.

52 posted on 02/27/2002 7:32:45 AM PST by maxwell
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To: maxwell
You are cracking me up with your joke. My deer hunting, mechanical engineer husband probably won't think it's funny, but I cannot stop chuckling!
53 posted on 02/27/2002 7:33:33 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
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To: Pharmboy
Understanding (software) Engineers - Take 10:

Coffee | Nose > Keyboard

Translated:

That sent coffee out my nose and onto my keyboard.

Shalom.

54 posted on 02/27/2002 7:33:44 AM PST by ArGee
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To: Illbay
I've never seen it before and I laughed.

If you aren't paying for the server space, it seems to be Jim Rob's place to make those complaints. If you don't want to see it again, you don't have to click on the post.

Shalom.

55 posted on 02/27/2002 7:36:32 AM PST by ArGee
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To: afraidfortherepublic
That's nothing. Mine kept a dismantled Model A car in my entry hall for a couple of years!

Oh! guess what's beside my front door - A copy machine the size of a refrigerator. He got it for a great deal when his company decided to lease them. It stopped working a year ago. No charity group will pick it up. We can't throw it away because someone he knows wants it for his church. Maybe they'll stop by and get it up one day. (sigh)

56 posted on 02/27/2002 7:38:47 AM PST by The Game Hen
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To: Ol' Sox
the local fire dept was not very happy ... after seeing this web page.

Yeah, I bet.

57 posted on 02/27/2002 7:40:25 AM PST by Right_Wing_Mole_In_Seattle
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To: Pharmboy
Subject: Engineers

For all those who know an engineer or at least tell engineer jokes, enjoy…

Q: When does a person decide to become an engineer?
A: When he realizes he doesn't have the charisma to be an undertaker.

Q: What do engineers use for birth control?
A: Their personalities.

Q: How can you tell an extroverted engineer?
A: When he talks to you, he looks at your shoes instead of his own.

Q: Why did the engineers cross the road?
A: Because they looked in the file and that's what they did last year.

Q: How do you drive an engineer completely insane?
A: Tie him to a chair, stand in front of him, and fold up a road map… the wrong way.

You might be an engineer if:

... choosing to buy flowers for your girlfriend or upgrading your RAM is a moral dilemma.
... you take a cruise so you can go on a personal tour of the engine room.
... in college you thought “Spring Break” was metal fatigue failure.
... the sales people at the local computer store can't answer any of your questions
... at an air show you know how fast the skydivers are falling.
... you bought your wife/girlfriend a new CD-ROM drive (or a Palm Pilot) for her birthday.
... you can quote scenes from any Monty Python movie.
... you can type 70 words per minute but can't read your own handwriting.
... you comment to your wife that her straight hair is nice and parallel.
... you sit backwards on the Disneyland rides to see how they do the special effects.
... you have saved every power cord from all your broken appliances.
... you have more friends on the Internet than in real life.
... you know what http:// stands for.
... you look forward to Christmas so you can put the kids' toys together.
... you see a good design and still have to change it.
... you spent more on your calculator than you did on your wedding ring.
... you still own a slide rule and know how to use it.
... you think that people yawning around you are sleep deprived.
... you window shop at Radio Shack.
... your laptop computer costs more than your car.
... your wife hasn't the foggiest idea of what you do at work.
... You've already calculated how much you make per second.
... you've tried to repair a $5 radio.

58 posted on 02/27/2002 7:41:59 AM PST by Washington-Husky
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To: The Game Hen
I think you could coin another aphorism.

If it ain't broke, there must not be any engineers around.

Shalom.

P.S. Before the flames start - yes I R1.

59 posted on 02/27/2002 7:45:25 AM PST by ArGee
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To: Washington-Husky
BWAAAAAHAHA! That one is going out to all my eng buds...

BUMP

60 posted on 02/27/2002 7:46:00 AM PST by maxwell
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