0:00
1:01:46
#26 – Doug Tyger – When is an engineer not an engineer?
Doug is the owner of Integral Manufacturing, between Cincinnati and Dayton.
- Chose engineering because it paid well
- Chose material science because materials are important to all other engineering disciplines.
- We were coops at Procter and Gamble.
- Helped fix a broken Pringles line
- He saw more options at a steel company, whose president was a metallurgical engineer.
- Supported auto industry.
- They crashed a lot of cars during development back then
- Material Science Engineering degree – isn’t something either science or engineering?
- He worked with guys who could design alloys in their head.
- When considering working on complex systems, a lot of people could be considered an engineer.
- Is the dual path still available for engineers?
- Is that guy sleeping or thinking hard?
- Is there a lightbulb, question mark, or exclamation point above your head?
- What type of question mark?
- Do you want a consultant to answer your questions or give you new questions?
- Doug sees himself as a job provider and loves to see people “get it”.
- Enjoys serving on boards for non-profits.
- Spends time with family and church men’s group.
Doug’s Company – Integral Manufacturing, https://integralmfg.com/
Bert’s Company – www.dexterityeng.com
Otros episodios de "Beers with Engineers"
No te pierdas ningún episodio de “Beers with Engineers”. Síguelo en la aplicación gratuita de GetPodcast.