EP#382: The Danger Pool

EP#382: The Danger Pool

MEP EP#382: The Danger Pool

The CHIPS act is in full swing with Texas Instruments, TSMC, Intel and other chip manufacturers scaling up and building new facilities in the United States. There is just one problem however, the engineering manpower required to run these high tech facilities. TSMC is struggling to fill hiring quotas and articles are citing TSMC working conditions as the reason. Stephen and Parker decide to explore the possibility of more reasons for this on this week’s episode of the MacroFab Engineering Podcast.

Chipmaker TSMC needs to hire 4,500 Americans at its new Arizona plants.

  • We touched on this in the past with the chip act. 668,000 domestic manufacturing jobs for the chips act on Episode #345 - The Hot List of Tasty Chip Fabs
  • TSMC says it will hire 4,500 new workers to support its two Arizona fabs, a sizable chunk of the total new jobs created. So far TSMC has hired ~2000 but say it is tough to hire.
  • Compensation and hiring
    • TSMC pays up to $160,000 annually for Ph.D.s with some good experience where that same Ph.D. can earn some $30,000 more at Intel
    • Intel is giving raises of $10K - $20K over TSMC offers to stay.
  • More students in STEM in Taiwan vs US : 31% compared to 17.5%

Apple launches Vision Pro AR headset to ship next year

  • $3500 When the VR industry is getting less expensive and in a hardware purchasing decline?
  • Pro price but no pro applications?

The Danger Pool

  • What would it take to make a “solder pot”
  • Simple calculations
    • 60/40 specific heat = 0.173 J/g-C
    • 60/40 melting temp = 190c
    • Energy to raise temp -> specific heat equation
    • Energy to raise 5kg temp by 165C = 142.7 kJ
    • Enthalpy of fusion = 37J/g
    • Energy needed to “melt” = 185kJ
    • Total Energy = 327 kJ
  • Joule is W.s
  • If we wanted to deliver this much power in 30 minutes
  • 182 Watts
  • Kitchen stove burner
    • Small ~1200W
    • Medium ~1500 to 1800W
    • Large ~2500W
  • 500mm x 175mm size

Avsnitt(448)

EP#404: The Barcode is 50 with its creator, Paul V. McEnroe

EP#404: The Barcode is 50 with its creator, Paul V. McEnroe

Parker and Stephen speak with Paul V. McEnroe, an award-winning engineer who developed multiple state-of-the-art technologies during his long career, including more than two decades in leadership roles at IBM. McEnroe is best known for his primary role in developing the Universal Product Code (UPC), the barcode used on every product in supermarkets and the retail industry, and the scanners that read them. In 2023, the barcode celebrates its 50th anniversary but now Paul is setting the record straight on the real story with his new book, THE BARCODE - How a Team Created One of the World's Most Ubiquitous Technologies. The discussion also covered subjects like being car nuts and Paul’s past ownership of a Buick Torpedo, a TR3, a Porsche Super 90, and a Jag XK150S Roadster, his apparent aptitude for being a mortician, control units and mainframes, where lasers were sourced from at the time, buying monkeys from Africa, owning the patent on the pistol grip scanner, what to make of QR codes, and much more! Relevant links:THE BARCODE - How a Team Created One of the World's Most Ubiquitous TechnologiesMEP EP#320: The Drop Ship ShuffleMEP EP#387: Recursive Vending MachinesMEP EP#398: Duke Nukem v. Parker, Raspberry Pi 5, Weldestroyer!Join the Circuit Break Discourse Community!Thank you for listening to the MacroFab Engineering Podcast!  We’d love to hear what you think of the show so please tweet at us @MacroFab and join our Circuit Break Community for discussions or email us at podcast@macrofab.com.

14 Nov 202354min

EP#403: Captured Pads

EP#403: Captured Pads

Parker and Stephen check in with the new Circuit Break Discourse community and a Chip of the Week discussion initiated by mobius_striptease, a closer look at the LT3073 3A, Ultra-Low Noise, High PSRR, 45mV Dropout Ultra-Fast Linear Regulator, a discussion about in and out pads ensues, Parker digs into Weldestroyer updates and how he found that a footswitch could not handle sourcing much current, which means my analog solution is out of the question, Parker provides a Box Truk update, focusing upon the A/C Selector and Protection Panel, exploring Shore power, and much more! Relevant links:Chip of The WeekLT3073 Datasheet and Product Info | Analog Devices 5MEP EP#276: Skippy DocumentationMEP EP#398: Duke Nukem v. Parker, Raspberry Pi 5, Weldestroyer!MEP EP#378: Crawfish ConundrumJoin the Circuit Break Discourse Community!Thank you for listening to the MacroFab Engineering Podcast!  We’d love to hear what you think of the show so please tweet at us @MacroFab and join our Circuit Break Community for discussions or email us at podcast@macrofab.com.

7 Nov 202351min

EP#402: Consciously Collecting Concepts

EP#402: Consciously Collecting Concepts

Parker and Stephen discuss Parker’s participation in Extra Life Day: Revenge of the Holiday Special on November 4, 2023, in which he’ll be playing and streaming STAR WARS Jedi: Fallen Order for 24 hours to raise funds for kids at his local Texas Children's Hospital, the related but unusual Star Wars Halloween costume he’ll be donning this year, checking in with the new Circuit Break Discourse community, how member Tom_Look prompted a discussion about how people organize projects, ideas, and part numbers, and extensive catch-up and update about Parker’s Box Truk, and  much more! Relevant links:Extra Life Day: Revenge of the Holiday SpecialJoin the Circuit Break Discourse Community!Organizing and documenting projectsBox Truk - Solar Panel ProjectMEP EP#378: Crawfish ConundrumThank you for listening to the MacroFab Engineering Podcast!  We’d love to hear what you think of the show so please tweet at us @MacroFab and join our Circuit Break Community for discussions or email us at podcast@macrofab.com.

31 Okt 202354min

EP#401: Recording Studio Problem Solving with Electrical Audio’s Greg Norman

EP#401: Recording Studio Problem Solving with Electrical Audio’s Greg Norman

Parker and Stephen have a great talk with Greg Norman, a recording engineer, producer, and technician at Steve Albini’s studio, Electrical Audio, in Chicago, who also constructs and repairs various audio devices out of necessity and general interest, under the name, Normaphone. Greg discusses his background and early “pre-Google” experiments and learnings, how to create a low-noise studio space and how your neighbors might unwittingly interfere with such things, why he has had to invent or upgrade certain audio engineering tools and whether or not there’s a market for these products, learning from and helping others in his field, what it’s like working with musicians, plus much more! Relevant links:Electrical AudioNormaphoneMEP EP#60: JOSH the mastermind behind the audio of the podcastMEP EP#56: Gotta Look ProThank you for listening to the MacroFab Engineering Podcast!  We’d love to hear what you think of the show so please tweet at us @MacroFab and join our Circuit Break Community for discussions or email us at podcast@macrofab.com.

24 Okt 20231h 17min

EP#400: We Are Circuit Break!

EP#400: We Are Circuit Break!

Parker and Stephen celebrate episode 400 of the MacroFab Engineering Podcast and announce its relaunch as Circuit Break starting next week, plus a discussion about MacroFab’s tenth anniversary, the end of our Slack channel and launch of our new Circuit Break Community hub, a brief history of this podcast and its trajectory, key projects that have been completed or else relegated to the shadow realm, plus much more! Relevant links:Celebrating 10 years of MacroFab (twitter)*NEW* Join our Circuit Break Community!MEP EP#356: Don't Let AI Brew Your BeerMEP EP#355: The One They Talk About Football Fields For a Long TimeThank you for listening to the MacroFab Engineering Podcast!  We’d love to hear what you think of the show so please tweet at us @MacroFab and join our Circuit Break Community for discussions or email us at podcast@macrofab.com.

17 Okt 202350min

EP#399: Zero to One: Joshua Manley on the language of the 3D realm

EP#399: Zero to One: Joshua Manley on the language of the 3D realm

Parker and Stephen welcome Josh Manley back to the show to discuss how humans and CAD can interact! Josh is the co-owner and CEO of CADClass.org. Through a comprehensive array of courses and literature, CADClass.org provides education of various software and design methodologies, catering to individuals across all proficiency levels. Since 2010, Josh has been utilizing his experience to create educational opportunities for anyone and everyone who wants to learn engineering skills. Here, he joins us to have a spirited discussion about CAD, 3D, and how such things can communicate and be taught to students who want to dig into this exciting new technological realm!Relevant links:MEP EP#389: The aCADemy of Education - Joshua Manley of CADClass.orgThe Ultimate Online Fusion 360 CAD SchoolThe Role of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the CAD IndustryThank you for listening to the MacroFab Engineering Podcast!  We’d love to hear what you think of the show so please tweet at us @MacroFab and join our slack channel at Macrofab dot com / slack or email us at podcast@macrofab.com.

13 Okt 20231h

EP#398: Duke Nukem v. Parker, Raspberry Pi 5, Weldestroyer!

EP#398: Duke Nukem v. Parker, Raspberry Pi 5, Weldestroyer!

Parker and Stephen discuss Parker’s past and upcoming Extra Life Day charity work, in which he plays video games like Duke Nukem and STAR WARS Jedi: Fallen Order to support Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals, a rather deep dive into the newly launched Raspberry Pi 5, personal project updates from Stephen about the Weldestroyer 3000, and much more! Relevant links:Extra Life Day: Revenge of the Holiday SpecialMEP EP#105: Community DiceIntroducing : Raspberry Pi 5MEP EP#361: Cold Welding This Podcast TogetherThank you for listening to the MacroFab Engineering Podcast!  We’d love to hear what you think of the show so please tweet at us @MacroFab and join our slack channel at Macrofab dot com / slack or email us at podcast@macrofab.com.

6 Okt 202349min

EP#397: Guard the CHIPS, New Math for Double E’s

EP#397: Guard the CHIPS, New Math for Double E’s

Parker and Stephen discuss community feedback that led Parker to order a Bambu X1 Carbon 3D Printer, which should be arriving any day now, S to the L to the A, “guardrails” that the U.S. Commerce Department has placed on the CHIPS for America program, the healthy job market for engineers in America right now, flagging down the double E’s, how to teach engineering students properly, new math, and much more! Relevant links:MEP EP#394: GPUs D.O.A, Reverse Polarity Problems, 3D Printer PicklesUS Commerce issues final national security guardrails on CHIPS incentivesHow Does the CHIPS Act Affect Manufacturing?MEP EP#388: CHIPS Can’t DipThank you for listening to the MacroFab Engineering Podcast!  We’d love to hear what you think of the show so please tweet at us @MacroFab and join our slack channel at Macrofab dot com / slack or email us at podcast@macrofab.com.

29 Sep 202349min

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