T
-
Categories
-
Platforms
-
Content
Trevor said:
It has nothing to do with the US.
There are reputable manufacturers, and some not-so-reputable.
YOUR suppliers are buying crap from the slightly less than above board
manufacturers.
THAT'S why crap appears on your shelf.
The way to fix it is to put your boot into your supplier's arse and say
stop buying from the cheapest possible supplier. Oh, and don't whine
about how much it all costs "now".
Alternative is to source yourself.
And cut your losses when you find your new super-low-cost supplier
pushes out those new-fangled mild steel semiconductors that don't work.
kreed said:Probably be a good thing, it might save countless civilian lives if
this crap fails in US military systems.
Bodgy crap equipment certainly demoralised the soviet military, so it
might do the same here.
Trevor said:Anyway, WES have done nothing about their crap leads.
The supervisor told him not to worry -- it was for the military and
military pilots knew all about risk.
...
Probably be a good thing, it might save countless civilian lives if
this crap fails in US military systems.
Bodgy crap equipment certainly demoralised the soviet military, so it
might do the same here.
OK, I had an "Intersect moment" there.
A few years back I lived in NY. At one point met an engineer that worked
for a company that made -- among very many other things -- jet engine
controllers. The same company may be associated with clock toasters that
have a tendency to burst into flames, and maybe an association TV show
written by Tina Fey. But I forgot the name.
Anyway, the guy told me he was worried about work. At some point he'd noticed
some funny goings-on at the plant that tested the controllers.
E.g. there was a big mil-mandated protocol to test the things in climate
chambers that could sim any alti to 60,000 ft, and run over a temp
range from some big -ve Celcuis to some big +ve temp. The protocol said
if there was any failuer during the range of conditions the whole test
had to be reset to the start, the device removed, the chamber rested,
and the test re-started. Only if the controller passed so many hrs
without failure could it be stamped "ok" and allowed to ship out of the plant.
But, said the engineer, he'd noticed some people had been just letting
the test run to completion regardless of whether any fault showed up or not.
Further, people had been signing parts out of the plant at times-of-day
where there was theoretically no-one on duty. And there seemed to be special
seals missing from a cabinet. The seals and a special tool to close them
were needed to close up the box for any controller that was marked "ok"
before it was shipped.
There were a few other irregularities, most of which I forget.
Anyway, the guy had gone to his supervisor with some of the queries
and asked what was going on. "Streamlining" was the gist of the reply.
Since these contollers went on military aircraft and the engineer had
some past association with the military (a lot of people in upstate NY
have people in the reserves and it was around Iraq I time) the engieer
complained that faulty testing put people's lives at risk.
The supervisor told him not to worry -- it was for the military and
military pilots knew all about risk.
--
[Relax -- it's not "global" warming; it's just "ocean" warming!]
QUOTE: Evidence is presented that the recent worldwide land warming has
occurred largely in response to a worldwide warming of the oceans rather
than as a direct response to increasing greenhouse gases over land.
-- BONZO@27-32-240-172 [daily nymshifter], 14 Dec 2010 10:35 +1100
I recall some years back there were similar problems with
"counterfeit" nuts, bolts, etc that were being used in military
aircraft. They would look and be marked identically to the "real" item
but would not be made with the same high grade of material needed in
that particular specification.
I wouldnt be surprised if a lot in these scams, the military /
government officials were involved, and getting kickbacks from these
scams.
Also there is the massive profit to be made on replacement aircraft
for those that crash.
**Like I said: I am pretty careful about where I source semis nowadays and
have been ever since PA alerted people to the issue.
"Trevor Wilson"
** PA = me, right ?
**Correct.
So when do you recall I first alerted people ?
And where ?
Maybe, but I doubt it.
Franc said:What surprises me about that article is not that the Chinese are
supplying fakes, but that the Americans are putting ANY Chinese made
stuff in their own weapons systems.
<http://www.manufacturingnews.com/news/10/0212/semiconductors.html>
"As of 2009, the percentage of global semiconductor production capacity
located in the United States was 14 percent, down from 25 percent in
2005 and 17 percent in 2007. Japan has the highest share of global
capacity (at 25 percent), followed by Taiwan (18 percent, up from 11
percent in 2001), Korea (17 percent, up from 11 percent in 2001), Europe
and the Middle East (11 percent), China (9 percent, up from 2 percent in
2001) and Southeast Asia (6 percent)."
Pay especial attention to the growths in Taiwan, Korea and China.
Let me know how you like things in several years' time...
Krypsis said:Is that when the US will be ranked economically below countries like
Bangladesh? No doubt wages in the US will have fallen to Bangladeshi
levels by then as well.