what about hydraulic systems?

Arde

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<edit>In my personal opinion as a forum member...</edit>

This thread is going nowhere fast and has zero value to the forum.
 
Architects here? I think they've already gotten rid of Master Bedroom. It's now Primary Bedroom.
 
I keep expecting substantial changes to the plumbing code addressing fixture calculations being clouded by the current gender neutrality policies.
"Primary Bedroom" in a new one on me, but I haven't done any residential work in quite some time.

We are getting way away from our classic BMWs here.
 
Carburetors are ahead of their time! At least they have 'primairies' and 'secondaries'...cant see anything wrong with that.

(but I'm Dutch, and we are generally very direct, and not very sensitive.

I dont mind some humour here, even if you have to go look for it.
 
That would the best choice I agree.
I was thinking of Push-Pull like is used in amplifiers, but it is not really accurate as both cylinders are pushed.
Compress and Expand?

Speaking of carburetors, a German friend told me the German word (vergassen) has probably even more sinister connotations than master-slave.

I've seen "input cylinder" and "output cylinder" for clutch hydraulics. Actually more descriptive than "master" and "slave".
 
"Rock" & "Roll"

or more related

"Wind" and "Storm"

but seriously quite popular terms is

"primary" and "secondary"
 
When I used to work in Video production, a connector to join two video cables was always called a Lesbian. We needed a lot of Lesbians most shoots.
 
Back to the BU engineering student. I'm sort of troubled that people who say they are studying engineering are actually spending their time on this sort of thing. I'm not saying that this sort of thing isn't important - perhaps it is - but how can you be serious about engineering and have time for this?

Can you imagine interviewing this kid for a job?

YOU: So this position involves designing a dam that will protect thousands of people who live downstream. It requires some familiarity with soil mechanics, fluid dynamics, and structural analysis. What education and experience do you have in those areas?

STUDENT: Well, none actually. But let me tell you how I cancelled the terms "master" and "slave".

YOU: Uh, maybe you should be talking to the people in our sales department. Or public relations. Or anything that isn't mission-critical.
 
Back to the BU engineering student. I'm sort of troubled that people who say they are studying engineering are actually spending their time on this sort of thing.

I don't think it's either/or. There are lots of bright engineers that can do more than one thing. ;)
 
There are lots of bright engineers that can do more than one thing.

That's not quite what I was saying - sorry if I wasn't clear. My concern is that the US engineering curriculum is being dumbed down. Reading the alumni newsletter from my own engineering school, I've observed that what passes for "engineering" today includes stuff like cancelling "master" and "slave". I strongly doubt that engineering students in India or China are encouraged to pursue this sort of activity or even have the free time to do so.
 
That's not quite what I was saying - sorry if I wasn't clear. My concern is that the US engineering curriculum is being dumbed down. Reading the alumni newsletter from my own engineering school, I've observed that what passes for "engineering" today includes stuff like cancelling "master" and "slave". I strongly doubt that engineering students in India or China are encouraged to pursue this sort of activity or even have the free time to do so.
I read somewhere recently that China graduates more engineers per year than there are in total in the US. Hard to get my head around that. I also read that lawyers in the US yearly bill the equivalent of the GDP of India. (heard that several years ago, so probably no longer the case)
 
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