#26 – Doug Tyger – When is an engineer not an engineer?
Doug is the owner of Integral Manufacturing, between Cincinnati and Dayton.
Chose engineering because it paid well
Chose material science because materials are important to all other engineering disciplines.
We were coops at Procter and Gamble.
Helped fix a broken Pringles line
He saw more options at a steel company, whose president was a metallurgical engineer.
Supported auto industry.
They crashed a lot of cars during development back the...
#26 – Doug Tyger – When is an engineer not an engineer?
Doug is the owner of Integral Manufacturing, between Cincinnati and Dayton.
- Chose engineering because it paid well
- Chose material science because materials are important to all other engineering disciplines.
- We were coops at Procter and Gamble.
- Helped fix a broken Pringles line
- He saw more options at a steel company, whose president was a metallurgical engineer.
- Supported auto industry.
- They crashed a lot of cars during development back then
- Material Science Engineering degree – isn’t something either science or engineering?
- He worked with guys who could design alloys in their head.
- When considering working on complex systems, a lot of people could be considered an engineer.
- Is the dual path still available for engineers?
- Is that guy sleeping or thinking hard?
- Is there a lightbulb, question mark, or exclamation point above your head?
- What type of question mark?
- Do you want a consultant to answer your questions or give you new questions?
- Doug sees himself as a job provider and loves to see people “get it”.
- Enjoys serving on boards for non-profits.
- Spends time with family and church men’s group.
Doug’s Company – Integral Manufacturing, https://integralmfg.com/
Bert’s Company – www.dexterityeng.com
View more