Julio (1)¶
Original OneNote page: Survey and research - Julio (1)
Route: meeting/person note
Categories: people_meetings, events, programs_funding, product_technical_or_learning
Source¶
- Word export:
C:\Users\adeel\OneDrive\100_Knowledge\203_TextCAD\01_Product_Project_Management\TextCAD_Wiki\inbox\onenoteexport\01_PROJECTS\Gauss Compute\Survey and research - Julio (1).docx - MHT export:
C:\Users\adeel\OneDrive\100_Knowledge\203_TextCAD\01_Product_Project_Management\TextCAD_Wiki\inbox\onenoteexport\01_PROJECTS\Gauss Compute\Survey and research - Julio (1).mht
Extracted Notes¶
These notes are extracted from the Word export so the source is visible in the wiki without moving or deleting the original file.
- Julio
- Got it 👍 I’ll help you structure and complete these rough notes into a clean document you can later reuse for your business idea pitch/interview summary. I’ll keep the engineering/PLM context intact while making it flow logically.
- Interview Notes – Former Volocopter Colleague
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- Observed Problems in Current Design Practices
- Lack of Design Reviews
- Most design discussions happen informally; no structured or documented review process.
- Designs often get translated into drawings without formal review checkpoints.
- Missing design reviews lead to critical issues (e.g., galvanic compatibility not checked).
- Unclear or Missing Design Guidelines
- No standardized reference or “bible” for engineers to follow.
- Rules like thread length, fastener engagement, torque values, material thickness, etc. are often not documented or not enforced.
- Sometimes unclear where existing design rules even come from.
- Documentation quality is poor compared to General Electric (GE), where documents were treated as live reference standards.
- Onboarding New Engineers
- New engineers are not effectively onboarded into design practices.
- Training sessions are often ineffective—people may attend but not absorb the rules.
- No structured values or practices being transferred to new hires.
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- Drawings & Manufacturing Interface
- Drawings
- Creating a proper drawing can take up to 8 hours (especially with GD&T, datums, stack-ups).
- At Volocopter, many people only saw the drawing for the first time when it was released → creates surprise issues.
- Lack of systematic stack-up analysis and GD&T validation with manufacturing.
- GD&T / Manufacturing Quality
- Need dedicated experts (manufacturing, quality, GD&T) to ensure datums and tolerances align with function and manufacturing feasibility.
- Approval process takes 1–2 days with the team; longer if issues are raised.
- At GE, drawing creation was highly automated; manual work was mainly in GD&T.
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- Special Case: Harness Design
- Harnesses routed through engines require careful tolerance consideration.
- Must balance between:
- Enough slack for assembly.
- Not too loose to risk damage.
- Currently no standardized “recipe” or checklist for harness design.
-
- Potential Solutions / Opportunities
- Automatic Design Review Checklists
- Integrated tool that automatically checks common design rules (thread length, torque, thickness, bending radius, harness slack, galvanic compatibility).
- Checklist ensures engineers don’t rely on memory or tribal knowledge.
- Centralized, Living Design Guidelines
- A “live database” or VPS for design rules (similar to how GE maintained design documents as bibles).
- Engineers can update rules as knowledge evolves → reduces ambiguity.
- Supports 5-sigma level design robustness.
- Structured Onboarding
- Instead of “training sessions,” new engineers should have guided checklists embedded into their workflow.
- Automated tools enforce best practices, so onboarding is less dependent on passive training.
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- Reference Practices from GE
- Documents treated as authoritative and continuously updated.
- Drawings could be created in one day because:
- Most processes were automated.
- Only GD&T required manual expert work.
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- People Mentioned
- Volocopter
- CEO: Artem (Ukrainian, “diamond”)
- CTO: David (diamond)
- GD&T experts: Tomascz, Julio
- Quality: Julio, Serhad
- Colleague: Frank
- ✅ This structured summary clearly separates Problems, Examples, and Solutions/Opportunities → perfect for feeding into your CAD-LLM-drawing automation business idea narrative.
- Do you want me to also recast this into a 1-page “problem-solution-opportunity” memo (incubator pitch style), so it directly ties into your startup concept?
- From https://chatgpt.com/c/68d11b92-4fd4-832a-bb58-42235673c2f3
- Can you structure and complete the notes below
- I interview a former colleauge of mine from volocotper, about my business idea
- Lack of design practices
- Design rule
- Thread length, engagement of fasteners
- How much torque?
- Thickness of materials
- Starting point of design
- Lack of deisign guidances
- On board people - new values
- Problem
- No Design reviews
- Talk about it informally
- No formal reviews
- Designs without reviews get translated into drawing
- Lack of design practices got transferred into drawings
- Galvanic compatibility is not correct
- Sometimes even the design practices even are not clear, where they are coming from
- Documentation is awful
- IN GE, documents like bible
- Live documents
- Harnesses through engine, need tolerance
URLs Found¶
- https://chatgpt.com/c/68d11b92-4fd4-832a-bb58-42235673c2f3
Next Curation Action¶
Promote this into a person page, link it to the relevant company/account, and create/update the EspoCRM contact if this relationship is still active.
Sources¶
C:\Users\adeel\OneDrive\100_Knowledge\203_TextCAD\01_Product_Project_Management\TextCAD_Wiki\inbox\onenoteexport\01_PROJECTS\Gauss Compute\Survey and research - Julio (1).docxC:\Users\adeel\OneDrive\100_Knowledge\203_TextCAD\01_Product_Project_Management\TextCAD_Wiki\inbox\onenoteexport\01_PROJECTS\Gauss Compute\Survey and research - Julio (1).mht