The wife's car needed cleaning so, being a lazy idle git on a warm dog-dangling day, I took it to one of those ARC chain carwashes. You know, the ones where they charge you between £3 and £6 for different scales of wash which I'm convinced are all the same except for the colour of goo that is sprayed on your car at the start
These things work by dragging your car (with you in it) through the wash by a conveyor chain into which you position one of your wheels. As I went through I wondered "how the heck does this thing work" ? There are several vehicles passing through at once, yet it knows what program each is on, and even seems to pause the conveyor at certain points to make sure those brushes really scrub the paintwork off properly. If its all done mechanically then it must be bloomin clever, but I suppose there some electronic gizmos hidden away somewhere.
Which got me thinking...isn't electronic engineering BORING?
Doing stuff mechanically is really clever, the pin setting machine on a 10-pin bowling alley uses a wickedly fiendish cam and follower device to position the arm which drops the pins into place in just the right position.
The Victorians didn't have electronics yet look at the stuff they managed to achieve, London even had its own ring-main water powered hydraulic system. Now thats cool!
Older hydromechanical aircraft engine fuel control units were masterpieces of ingenuity. Springs, cams, bellows and servo pressures all controlled by precision crafted spill valves permit the device to cater for changes in aircraft speed, altitude, engine RPM, bleed air demand and more besides. They could even accomodate inputs which contradicted each other and still deliver the fuel to the engine in the right quantity. Setting these puppies up required a skilled technician making fine corrections to any one of up to 7 adjusters during an engine run lastuing up to two hours.
Modern systems are basically a tap connected to a computer which is clinically efficient, can handle inputs the hydromechanical devices can't and reduce the maintenace costs and time. But they are sooooo boring, a skilled thecnician becomes a black box swapper
So which are you prefer, mechanical or electrical/electronic and why?