Analog Designer Bob Pease Dies In Car Crash
EdwinFreed writes "It's being widely reported that Bob Pease, well known analog circuit designer and author of Pease Porridge, has died in a car accident. He reportedly was driving alone in his 1969 Beetle and failed to negotiate a turn."
It sounds like he was a brilliant EE but, if he was driving one of those things, then he was a damned fool when it came to ME and physics.
As an analog designer, I've come to appreciate Bob's many contributions over the years. He was a good writer and a terrific engineer, and he knew both theory and hands-on practice better than most of us. He could explain complex concepts in simple language, and it seemed he was a no-nonsense kind of guy yet had a good sense of humour. The electronics field, from hobbyists, to other engineers, to semiconductor companies, owes him a debt of gratitude. He will be missed.
'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
Are you serious? First, seatbelts weren't standard in 1969 Beetles. Second, if you did have them, using them was probably more of a risk than not. Third, the article states he wasn't wearing his seatbelt because in this nanny-state day and age, they are almost obligated to state stupid useless facts to coax the rest of us lemmings into following statistically good practices -- but it does not say if it was a factor in his death. He hit a tree dead on in a tiny lightweight 42-ish year old car with a rear mounted engine. A 1969 Beetle has you sitting sharply upright beneath a huge steering wheel with your nose in the windshield. It's far far more likely that he was crushed rather than ejected. I doubt a seatbelt have prevented that.
The risk was driving, or enjoying antique/classic automobiles, or perhaps driving too fast. Sure, seatbelts are a good idea, but don't be a friggin nanny.
He truly did dislike engineers who didn't make smoke and relied on Spice simulations to design things, but he knew what he was talking about. His floobydust stories were spot on. I just had the pleasure of rereading his take on the Taguchi method.
I never got to meet him, but I did manage once or twice to exchange mail. His column was the first thing I looked for, and his books are legend.
Goodbye Bob. Thank you Pease family for sharing him with us.
IIRC, it was the swing axle rear ends in the Corvairs that led to Nader's "Unsafe at any speed" suit.
This is a bit off topic, but having a technical discussion about the cause of the crash is probably what Pease would do too ;) Rest in peace.