vapviking
Old & In the Way
This is all well and good. I expect the highest engineering standards and implementation especially when it comes to carrying me to 38,000 feet and back alive. Nothing but the best, please. Backed by billions of dollars and a whole industry dedicated to that success and my safe return.I have seen this 5% failure rate quoted before. Can you please tell me the source for this metric.
Although my GH is working perfectly (and I'm thankful for that and love the vape), I rather agree with Joemoma though I wouldn't express it that way.
I am also an engineer, I worked for a long time in airborne electronics/avionics and I KNOW that there are ways to drive failure modes out during development and drive out infant moralities from production runs before shipping. I also have some familiarity with failure analysis and corrective action. All of this takes time, money, and a commitment to quality.
If these guys really were aerospace engineers, none of these concepts should be foreign to them.
Just saying, they can make the best functionally performing vape in the world but still fail due to poor company performance.
The hopper guys were pretty much in their garage 2 years ago. Crowd sourced funding for launch.
Even now, I bet they don't have a robot pressing that clicker button 100,000 times to test it (or was that in one of the early videos lol). But I also bet they have some form of testing/qc in various other steps or would not have gotten half this far.
In any design, decisions are made that affect build, aesthetic, reliability and more. As you said, time and money. Some of these decisions may be life saving, some are far less critical.
I'm getting a Hopper for $135 that might last a lifetime. Or not. I'm not an engineer and these guys have impressed me so far, warts and all.