Perceptions and attitudes can be hard to figure sometimes.
Guy buys a new truck, wants to "improve" it's performance, so checks out a few specialty shops, chooses one - settles on the mods he wants done and writes out a big check. He didn't even touch a wrench, or do any of the basic research or development of what was done to his truck - but he gains instant recognition by many of his peers as a "good wrench" - a knowledgeable mechanic, an "automotive expert"...
Another guy does lots of reading, does significant testing and experimenting on his own with mixed results, and does essentially all his own work and mods, and ends up with a vehicle that meets the goals he sought to achieve. His vehicle may well fall WAAaaay below the first guy's in terms of technology and actual power - so is he less of a "wrench"?
There are other extremes that fall outside and in between the above 2 examples - what is YOUR yardstick as to what constitutes a "good wrench", or respected "automotive expert"?
Is "automotive expertise" something you can get by writing a check or copying work and development OTHERS have already done, or is it more related to trial and error development guys do on their own?
Guy buys a new truck, wants to "improve" it's performance, so checks out a few specialty shops, chooses one - settles on the mods he wants done and writes out a big check. He didn't even touch a wrench, or do any of the basic research or development of what was done to his truck - but he gains instant recognition by many of his peers as a "good wrench" - a knowledgeable mechanic, an "automotive expert"...
Another guy does lots of reading, does significant testing and experimenting on his own with mixed results, and does essentially all his own work and mods, and ends up with a vehicle that meets the goals he sought to achieve. His vehicle may well fall WAAaaay below the first guy's in terms of technology and actual power - so is he less of a "wrench"?
There are other extremes that fall outside and in between the above 2 examples - what is YOUR yardstick as to what constitutes a "good wrench", or respected "automotive expert"?
Is "automotive expertise" something you can get by writing a check or copying work and development OTHERS have already done, or is it more related to trial and error development guys do on their own?
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