oldnavy wrote:
RFCRD wrote:
Just keep your ingenuity flowing, eventually this problem will get solved.
It's still troubling that with a small army on engineers all the $$$ DC and the other manufacturers spend on R&D that they can't build a simple workable solution for this. One would think DC would trip over themselves to add another filter to the list to sell me for $38.95. Of course in DC style, it would be a proprietary part and need serviced often, say every 12K miles. Or maybe they are banking on selling us new EGR valves annually for $300 a pop from now until eternity.
Sometimes I think most all engineers seem to box themselves in, they seem to get stuck thinking other engineers did it this way for a reason and therefore they should not seek change or ask why it is done that way. An example of this is every engineer I ever talked with about the way the OEM CCV is designed on VW, MB or these VM engines, they will tell me when I suggest getting rid of the OEM CCV with the poppet valve it has inside, that serves an important purpose simply because the OEM engineers designed it that way and put it on the vehicle. They get very indignent when I or someone else suggest it is a worthless POS and not even needed on the engine.
The trouble with corporations is the "Bean Counters". They end up compromising a great design because of costs. It's all about the bottom line. If the bean counters can not visualize that it will actually cost them more than the savings then a bad design goes to production. SOSDD!!
Also the EPA/government gets their grubby fingers into a project and it again gets compromised.
I don't think the brightest and best engineers are working for the Car companies anymore as there are so many other fields out there vying for their services.
Now the sad part is the dealers and a lot of their techs are brain washed into thinking that the company engineers are the last word and it just can't be any better than how they designed it. Of course anyone that works in an engineering environment knows that's a crock of bull.
Most real improvements have come from the private sector. But, a lot of pattens are bought and rat holed in a closet as it would cause a loss of revenue from lack of sales of parts, repair labor costs, etc.