Lucien Nunes mentioned and gave credit to one of his mentors which reminded me of three fellows who I have much to thank.
My next door neighbour taught electrical engineering, apprentice electricians and the electrical aspects of refrigeration systems. He did his apprenticeship at Metropolitan-Vickers in Leeds and then the Yorkshire Electricity Board before teaching. I learned from him the art and science of electrical work. Enough as a teenager to do electrical work and my own design of burglar alarm in folk's homes and businesses and do the testing required at the time. He taught me to abide by the rules which he regarded as accumulated wisdom.
The next is my physics teacher who applied physics to everything from the green flash at sunset to the Magnus effect of footballs. He posed me problems which in the early days I could solve or get close to solving but increasingly problems that were beyond my ken and reach at the time - and that was their purpose.
Finally, my uncle who was an electrician in the 1930's, volunteered for the RAF and served as a flight sergeant maintaining the electrical and electronic equipment in the Wellington bomber. After the war he made TVs, repaired them and radios in his wonderful workshop and invented solutions to problems - he was just pipped to the post on the automatically operated extractor fan in toilets. He loved experimenting - how things perform in real life and not just on the drawing board, and fixing things.
What about you?
My next door neighbour taught electrical engineering, apprentice electricians and the electrical aspects of refrigeration systems. He did his apprenticeship at Metropolitan-Vickers in Leeds and then the Yorkshire Electricity Board before teaching. I learned from him the art and science of electrical work. Enough as a teenager to do electrical work and my own design of burglar alarm in folk's homes and businesses and do the testing required at the time. He taught me to abide by the rules which he regarded as accumulated wisdom.
The next is my physics teacher who applied physics to everything from the green flash at sunset to the Magnus effect of footballs. He posed me problems which in the early days I could solve or get close to solving but increasingly problems that were beyond my ken and reach at the time - and that was their purpose.
Finally, my uncle who was an electrician in the 1930's, volunteered for the RAF and served as a flight sergeant maintaining the electrical and electronic equipment in the Wellington bomber. After the war he made TVs, repaired them and radios in his wonderful workshop and invented solutions to problems - he was just pipped to the post on the automatically operated extractor fan in toilets. He loved experimenting - how things perform in real life and not just on the drawing board, and fixing things.
What about you?