Reflex wrote:
Goglio704 wrote:
Reflex wrote:
That dosen't mean people shouldn't try of course. Some might stumble into real solutions, and some may just have fun in the attempt. After all, the vehicle is personal property, everyone can do what they want with it.
There is your problem. Even when making a somewhat positive remark, you find it necessary to insult people. Many here arrive at solutions through a lot of thought, research, effort, and previous experience. You insult them by implying that it's dumb luck.
Without the original documents it is essentially dumb luck. Its not an insult to say that. Thats how almost everything is reverse engineered. The difference is that the skilled have a good idea of where to start looking, but that does not change the fact that they could be heading up a blind alley regardless. Any time your trying to repair something that you do not have full data on, you are hoping that things work like your guessing they will.
In today's day and age, reverse engineering is anything but luck and rather a business. To reveal the secrets of a bolt lets say, the following would be performed:
1) material- isotope is shot and a chemical analyisis is revealed to ID material
2) hardness- rockwell and conductivity is performed to reveal tensile properties for heat treat requirements and further ID material
3) measurement- CMM or optical laser scan to measure part to be used in creating a 3D model
4) 3D model- is used to generate rapid prototype to verify model design
5) part- 3D model used to create machining code
6) plating- visual, irridite, etc can be used to identify chrome and cad requirements
Manufacturers all over the world do this to stay competitive and have become experts in unraveling others secrets. The trick is to apply patents on the good ones before others see them. Software might be difficult to decode, there's probally programs that do this already, I don't know. Anything that you can see and do a feely touchy to, can easily be re-engineered no problem.