• Question: Hi Steph What exactly do you do in your work and do you find it fulfilling?

    Asked by elziee to Ant, Dan, Matt, Mike, Steph on 14 Mar 2012.
    • Photo: Matt Maddock

      Matt Maddock answered on 14 Mar 2012:


      Hmmm – I’m not Steph, but I imagine it’s great to take the awesome ideas that scientists have and try to make them work with the fascinating intricacies of the real world!

      …or should I answer for me? 😉

    • Photo: Stephanie Tomlinson

      Stephanie Tomlinson answered on 14 Mar 2012:


      Hi Elziee,

      A mixture of things. I manage the development of the laser labs which means that the scientists will have ideas about how they can improve their systems (for example, make the beam more powerful) or will need me to check the system mechanically to see if it can be improved (for example, vibrations (shaking) of the bits in the laser beam can be a big problem). I then need to assess the best way to improve the system. Sometimes I will design a new piece of kit or modify an existing one. When I do design work, I sketch ideas out on paper or model them on a 3D computer aided design software. I have to make sure that I have fully understood what the scientists want (one person might interpret a request differently from the next). Once I have finished the design and the scientsists have checked that it does look like it will do what they want, I will organise for someone to make it. I manage the mechanical workshop so I have a lovely team of people to make things for me. They also have to make things for other people so I look through all the jobs and find out which is most important. I then give out the jobs to the people in the workshop depending on which job suits which person best. My job involves a lot of communication with people, which is something I enjoy a lot. I find my work very fulfilling as i like to see things change and progress and it is very exciting when your ideas work first time. The scientists will provide very interesting engineering challenges and I have to negotiate with them to come to a solution that is achievable – it is the scientists job to stretch convention and have crazy (but ultimately useful) ideas.

    • Photo: Dan Veal

      Dan Veal answered on 14 Mar 2012:


      I have a few projects, but my current one is with vibration: the science of how things shake. I need to produce a device – a bit like a pendulum that swings back and forth at a constant rate which will be used to calibrate a measuring device that measures vibrations.

      You know if you have scale that measures weight, and you put a weight on it that weighs exactly 500grams (we can talk about the difference between weight and mass another day!), and the scale tells you “502g” that the scale is wrong, because your weight is a true standard.

      In the same way, i need to create a vibration standard (swings back and forth at a set rate) that tells me weather the vibration scale is right or now. Does that make any sense? Hope so!!

      I find it really fulfilling, the people i work with are great fun, and the work is challenging and keeps me thinking.

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