Tales From the Cube

“Not I,” said the rat: the tale of the Little Red Hen-gineer “Not I,” said the rat: the tale of the Little Red Hen-gineer
By Steve Lubs, Department of Defense, 11/12/2009
Tales From The Cube: It sometimes pays to shut off all the extra noise—um, information—and handle things your own way.
Keep on truckin’
By John Bate, Volvo Group North America, 10/22/2009
Tales From The Cube: Changing both the antenna and the transmitter didn't clear up this mysterious transmitter-shutdown problem. It turns out that antennas with the same part number were indeed different.

Keep it simple, stupid, and kiss problems goodbye
By JB Guiot, Digilea SA, 10/8/2009
Tales From The Cube: When solving a design dilemma, sometimes less is more.

Lightning strikes sewage setup
By Jacob Brodsky, Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, 9/17/2009
Tales From The Cube: Mysterious, random chip failures leave SCADA-system engineer wondering whether isolation from ground could be the cause.

Unreal-wheel deal
By Jeff Fries, GE Transportation, 9/3/2009
Tales From The Cube: Do all those rules for signal propagation, high-speed-digital design, and line terminations really apply to cables more than a mile long? Tough lessons you learn in a real-life application prove that they actually do.

Finger on the trigger
By Ernest Tanner, Lattice Semiconductor, 8/20/2009
Tales From The Cube: Circuits are getting faster and more complicated. Fortunately, the tools we have are getting more powerful, too.

Dark side of the light
By Edward Sullivan, Fibertek Inc, 8/6/2009
Tales From The Cube: When a new design is exhibiting strange timing bugs, it can be difficult to decide where to begin your debugging. So, set it up on a testbench, hook it up to an oscilloscope, turn on a desk lamp, and get to work.

“Dog” PLL chases its own tail
By Glen Chenier, Teeter Totter Tree Stuff, 7/23/2009
Tales From The Cube: What to do when an LC oscillator insists on wild phase gyrations around a desired phase-lock point? One engineer is able to tame the beast.

A breath of fresh air
By David Williams, Whirlpool, 7/9/2009
Tales From The Cube: Breathing on failed control boards shows that condensation can cause failure.

Weather or not: All signs point to “no”
By JT Klopcic, United Parcel Service, 6/25/2009
Tales From The Cube: When recycling old embedded code, the whole become less than the sum of the parts when you're up against a tradeshow deadline, of course.

The boss is always right, even when he's wrong
By Steve Lubs, Department of Defense, 6/11/2009
Tales From The Cube: It's hard to teach an old, analog-oriented manager new, digital tricks.

Full speed ahead!
By Walter Lindenbach, 5/28/2009
Tales From The Cube: A rattled engineer needs to make sure his fix is just right for a failed over-speed sensor on an 1800-hp Solar Saturn jet-turbine-driven gas compressor.

Filter-feedthrough-failure flash
By Wayne Miller, Wayne Miller Associates LLC, 5/14/2009
Tales From The Cube: A trip to Indonesia helps one engineer solve the case of a high rate of feedthrough failures.

Mismating mix-up makes for monstrous military mission
By Bob Mason, Schneider Electric, 4/23/2009
Tales From The Cube: A technician mates together two mismatched connectors, damaging an aircraft and yielding an impossible task.

Flip-flop flap
By Holger Steffens, Ident Technology, 4/9/2009
Tales From The Cube: A USB controller in an FPGA hangs up after just a couple of seconds of operation. Simulations showed that everything was fine.

Conspiracy theory
By Garry Motter, SciMeasure Analytical Systems, 3/19/2009
Tales From The Cube: An engineer must figure out what to do when his computer lies to him and his oscilloscope covers up for it.

A lesson in humidity? No sweat
By Richard Rice, Independent Contractor, 3/5/2009
Tales From The Cube: Humidity proves to be the culprit when a medical device experiences an outrageously high failure rate.

Reversal of fortune
By Glen Chenier, Teeter Totter Tree Stuff, 2/19/2009
Tales From The Cube: Synchronous-FET rectifiers teach one designer a lesson about dc/dc converters and current flow.

Getting real with the real-time clock
By Vishwas Vaidya, Tata Motors, 2/5/2009
Tales From The Cube: The engineering team responsible for real-time motion control of 30 giant antennas composing the world's largest radio telescope must determine why antennas are drifting off target.

Noisy radio link puts brakes on racing-crew communication
By Roy Gardner, Superior Technical, 1/22/2009
Tales From The Cube: Interference is hampering driver-to-pit-crew communication via a 460-MHz FM system. Even disconnecting the driver's mic doesn't help. So where is the noise coming from?

A bad-capacitor story ends happily
By Samuel Kerem, The Johns Hopkins University, APL, Space Department, 1/8/2009
Tales From The Cube: When the same capacitor ends up charred in too many systems to dismiss the failures as statistically possible, an engineer must approach the problem via old-fashioned layout inspection.

Mysterious data errors
By Ron Tipton, TDL Technology Inc, 12/15/2008
Tales From The Cube: Input of 12 sequential 1s causes a data-collection system to output garbled data. This looks like a job for 12-gauge AWG wire.

All analog, all the time
By Jim Delmonico, General Electric, 12/5/2008
Tales From The Cube: A young engineer enamored with the simple, deterministic nature of digital design soon learns that everything, at some level, is analog.

All fail down: ESD-induced failures lead to a logical trap
By Larry Baxter, Capsense.com, 11/27/2008
Tales From The Cube: When terminals in low-humidity cities fail, it's not hard to finger ESD as the cause. Figuring out the fix turns out to be more of a challenge, especially when engineers assume a single design change should do the trick.

Align up: The case of the out-of-sync synchro amps
By Arnold N Simonsen, Electrical Engineer, 11/13/2008
Tales From The Cube: An Apollo-program engineers struggles to straighten out a system that suffers from repeated misalignment of antenna synchro amplifiers.

Stick to the schematic
By Barry Harvey, Intersil Inc, 10/30/2008
Tales From The Cube: How do you get a 1.6-GHz oscillation from a 1.2-GHz part? When you assigned an intern to build your circuit.

Repeat offender
By Glen Chenier, Teeter Totter Tree Stuff, 10/16/2008
Tales From The Cube: A T1 multiplexer generates an unrecognizable waveform when driving a new repeater. The repeater vendor repeatedly swears nothing is wrong, and the boss is getting anxious.

Good as gold
By Thomas Black, Digital Products Company, 10/2/2008
Tales From The Cube: When a vendor obsoletes a critical ADC, a system designer finds himself becoming an IC-packaging expert—and learns not to skimp on bond wires.

Passive part becomes aggressive
By Craig Hermann, Engineer, 9/18/2008
Tales From The Cube: A compterized phone-answering system works but fails diagnostic tests, while its 'backup' passes the tests but won't work. The engineer tasked with resolving the conundrum eventually corners a surprising villain.

The case of the stolen capacitor
By Glen Chenier, Teeter Totter Tree Stuff, 9/4/2008
Tales From The Cube: An engineering change order erases a design's input stabilizing capacitance, with costly results.

In EDN's Tales From The Cube, engineers relate their most vexing design challenges— and how they conquered them. From the cubicle to the test bench to the field, hear how your peers solve real-world problems.

What's your story? If we publish it, you'll receive $200. (Target word count: 700.)

EDN gratefully acknowledges the contributions of all the engineers who share their stories here.

We also thank illustrator Daniel Vasconcellos, who delivers on short notice and adds an oft-needed note of levity.



 



 

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