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What Brilliant Thing Did You Do?

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
Most of the time, things I do range from mundane to bone headed.
But on occasion, I stumble into an opportunity to do something great.
Once, GM Truck & Bus hired me to design an electrical control system for heavy truck brakes.
They wanted to free up room behind the dashboard for fancy pants electronics.
Within a couple weeks, I figured out that what they wanted wasn't compatible with a high G environment.
So I proposed an alternative which addressed their larger goal, instead of what they hired me to do.
I used miniature pneumatic controls to remotely operate valves on a manifold elsewhere.
Things went swimmingly.
We even improved reliability, serviceability, & aesthetics.
Employers & co-workers were pleased, money was made (by me), & we were a brilliant technical success.
(But the project died without ever going into production.)
What struck me here is the importance of understanding why one does a task is as important as the task itself.
This is because one can when when a task should be done differently, or not at all.

We all, no matter how inept we are most of the time, have our moments when we may look back, & say....
"I done good!".

So, fellow posters, tell me of your triumphs.
No matter if they're odd, small, boring, or ultimately useless (like mine)....it's all good.
 
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Lyndon

"Peace is the answer" quote: GOD, 2014
Premium Member
I worked for a speaker manufacturing company in the early 80s, I spent 6 months designing a transmission line 4 ft tall tower speaker with an 8" Bass, 8" special dead resonance plastic cone bass midrange, and 1" titanium coated tweeter, designed a complex electronic crossover, and the box, but after 6 months the company said they weren't going to go into production, even though they sounded as good as the $4500 KEF reference speakers they were selling(or perhaps because mine sounded better than the one they made more profit on??), but I could keep the prototype, I eventually traded the prototype to a friend for a great 1968 Volvo sedan, good deal, I kept a smaller two way version for myself, years later after I had blown out some of the speakers at party volume, I ordered even better replacement speakers from the same French company, and built an even better version of the tower speakers for myself, with 1" thick particle board, air conditioner duct sealer to further deaden resonances inside the box, and a rounded edges with no grill cloth design, that was better than the original, but never would have gone over for the company I had worked for. I still have them today, they sound pretty incredible.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
I worked for a speaker manufacturing company in the early 80s, I spent 6 months designing a transmission line 4 ft tall tower speaker with an 8" Bass, 8" special dead resonance plastic cone bass midrange, and 1" titanium coated tweeter, designed a complex electronic crossover, and the box, but after 6 months the company said they weren't going to go into production, even though they sounded as good as the $4500 KEF reference speakers they were selling(or perhaps because mine sounded better than the one they made more profit on??), but I could keep the prototype, I eventually traded the prototype to a friend for a great 1968 Volvo sedan, good deal, I kept a smaller two way version for myself, years later after I had blown out some of the speakers at party volume, I ordered even better replacement speakers from the same French company, and built an even better version of the tower speakers for myself, with 1" thick particle board, air conditioner duct sealer to further deaden resonances inside the box, and a rounded edges with no grill cloth design, that was better than the original, but never would have gone over for the company I had worked for. I still have them today, they sound pretty incredible.
Don't take this the right way, but....
You (your avatar) look like someone who'd do exactly that!
 

Lyndon

"Peace is the answer" quote: GOD, 2014
Premium Member
41e815075a9bf88f4d1ec01718b30c4b
 

Lyndon

"Peace is the answer" quote: GOD, 2014
Premium Member
Actually that's what I looked like in the early 80s when I was designing loudspeakers, for some reason I can't add text to the post with the picture????
 

Skwim

Veteran Member
After considerable research and writing I finished a manuscript that was published twelve years ago by a major publishing house. It came out in both hardcover and paperback editions. Not brilliant, but not in my field of expertise either. It was one of those things I did because it was a challenge and fun.


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