Been busy, have some reading to do here...
Just read this from an older post :
Re: stirling engines and education
There are one or two teachers who contribute to this forum, who use the Stirling Engine in their teaching, one is Chriske who teaches 14 to 18 year olds in a Technical School at Duffel in Belgium, look him up in the members section.
The loss of practical engineering education seems to be world wide, if this keeps spreading, we'll be living in caves, and hunting animals for food, and eating fruit from the jungle.
Ian S C
Ian,
Just a few thoughts.
I think in a few decades engineering as we know it today will completely disappear. Most of the readers on this forum will think I'm absolutely nuts, sorry guys...

Technology as it every day changes very fast will end up using 3D-printers to make us mechanical parts. I think the use of all machines we have in our workshop, milling, lathe, drilling,saw, you name it will be out of a job. I think we are the last generations to use these machines. Most of the smaller parts will be printed. These 3D-printers use the same technology and almost the same software as mechanical CNC machines do. At this point metal 3D-printing is very slow, but hey..! every new invention was supposed to end up in the waste-bucket, not...?
I hope not to be kicked from this forum...

Chris
PS, just bought me a large second hand milling machine. I hope this will give some credit...

