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Why I Wrote The Sheet Mechanic (And Why Calculations Aren’t Enough)

For engineers who already know the math—but still lose projects. For the last few years, I’ve been sharing technical guides here on Mechanical Design Handbook —how to size a motor, how to calculate fits, and (as you recently read) how to choose between timing belts and ball screws. But after 25 years in industrial automation, I realized something uncomfortable: Projects rarely fail because the math was wrong. They fail because: The client changed the scope three times in one week. A critical vendor lied about a shipping date (and no one verified it). The installation technician couldn’t fit a wrench into the gap we designed. University taught us the physics. It didn’t teach us the reality. That gap is why I wrote my new book, The Sheet Mechanic . This is not a textbook. It is a field manual for the messy, political, and chaotic space between the CAD model and the factory floor. It captures the systems I’ve used to survive industrial projec...
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Recent posts

Compressed Air Leaks: The Most Expensive Invisible Factory Problem

The Failure Scenario: The plant manager notices the main air pressure dropping across the factory floor during the second shift. Assuming the plant has outgrown its current capacity, they approve a $45,000 CapEx request to buy and install a massive new 100 HP rotary screw compressor. Six months later, an external energy auditor walks the plant floor on a quiet Sunday. They discover that 30% of the plant's total compressed air capacity is blowing straight into the atmosphere through hundreds of tiny, invisible leaks. The Cause: The plant didn't have a capacity problem; they had a leak problem. They spent $45,000 to feed "artificial demand." Because compressed air doesn't leave a puddle on the floor like a hydraulic leak or smoke like a burning electric motor , it is entirely ignored by maintenance teams until the pressure drops. Compressed air is often called the "Fourth Utility" in manufacturing, and it is by far the most expensive to genera...

Centrifugal Pump Cavitation: Causes, Damage, NPSH & Prevention

The Failure Scenario: A maintenance technician walks past a massive cooling water pump and hears a distinct, terrifying noise: it sounds exactly like the pump is circulating a slurry of gravel and marbles. Assuming the suction strainer is broken and rocks have entered the casing, they tear the pump down. They find no rocks, but the thick, solid stainless-steel impeller looks like it has been eaten away by acid, covered in deep, spongy craters. The Cause: The pump wasn't pumping rocks; it was destroying itself through cavitation . The system's suction pressure dropped so low that the water literally boiled at room temperature. The "gravel" sound was the violent acoustic shockwave of millions of microscopic vapor bubbles imploding against the metal impeller with enough force to blast away solid steel. Centrifugal pump cavitation is the number one cause of premature pump failure, leading directly to destroyed mechanical seals, shattered bearings , and catast...

20 Common Electric Motor Problems (Troubleshooting Guide)

The Failure Scenario: A 100 HP (75 kW) blower motor trips the breaker. The technician resets it, but the motor just emits a loud, angry hum and refuses to spin. Assuming the motor is burned out, they spend 6 hours and $4,000 replacing it. When they hit the start button on the new motor, it emits the exact same loud hum and trips the breaker again. The Cause: The technician swapped a mechanical component for an electrical problem. The motor wasn't dead; the circuit had dropped a phase (single-phasing) due to a blown fuse in the motor control center. The "angry hum" was the motor desperately trying to start on only two phases. The lack of a simple symptom-based diagnosis cost the plant thousands of dollars in unnecessary downtime. Electric motors are the workhorses of the industrial world. When they fail, they almost always display distinct audible, thermal, or mechanical symptoms first. This master troubleshooting guide maps the 20 most common electric motor ...

Excel VBA Kinematic Simulation: Overlapping Motion in High-Speed Machines

The Engineering Challenge: In 2005, I was tasked with upgrading a mechanical transfer turret used to handle highly fragile glass tubes between a conveyor and another process. Production demanded a 25% throughput increase—jumping from 1,200 UPH (Units Per Hour) to 1,500 UPH. Simply speeding up the main drive motor was impossible; the resulting inertial forces and acceleration spikes would have violently shattered the glass tubes before they ever reached the sealing station. The Solution: When you need to increase machine throughput without increasing acceleration forces, the answer is almost always overlapping motion . However, overlapping mechanisms in tight spaces introduces a severe risk of catastrophic mechanical collisions. To validate this 25% speed increase safely, I didn't use expensive 3D motion analysis software. Instead, I used Microsoft Excel and VBA to build a custom 2D kinematic simulator. Here is how that mathematical model was built, and how that exact m...

Bearing Failure Analysis: 12 Common Causes (With Photos)

The Failure Scenario: A critical 200 HP conveyor motor trips out on high temperature. The maintenance technician finds the drive-end bearing completely locked up, the housing scorched blue, and the shaft scored. They replace the bearing, assuming it simply "died of old age." Two months later, the exact same bearing violently fails again, shutting down the plant and costing $45,000 in lost production. The Cause: Bearings do not die of old age; they are murdered by their operating environment. The technician threw away the failed bearing without performing a forensic visual teardown. If they had cut the outer race open, they would have seen the distinct "washboard" pattern of electrical fluting, revealing that a lack of shaft grounding—not a bad bearing—was the true root cause. To stop recurring downtime, reliability engineers must learn to read the physical damage left behind on the raceways and rolling elements. This guide breaks down the 12 most common...