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Table of Contents

Issue date: October 7, 2002

Features
Tires go high-tech
Engineers take different roads in developing systems that monitor and even re-pressurize tires on moving vehicles
Bigtrucks, tight turns
Four wheel steer enables tight turns, but safety came first in this by-wire steering system


Driving by wire
In the coming decade, proven aerospace technology will replace many of the hydraulic and mechanical systems of automobiles today


The sound of quality
Noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH) specialists are tuning products to vibrate less and sound better


What a gas!
Our annual survey reveals design engineers



Departments


Guest Commentary
Cars, computers, and constant change


Hot Products
Innovative Programmable Control Devices


Product News
Electrical Electronics

Latest and Greatest Offerings in the Engineering Marketplace


Readers Write
Opinions, Suggestions, Solutions and More


Sneak Preview
A bicycle built for none

Come out, come out wherever you are

Hey Mom, I shrank the detector

No more speeding for me

Quantum number crunching



Columns


Break Time!
Hook up your soda machine for fun and profits


Designer
Under-floor module


Editorial
Galileo, the Ideal Gas Law, and the perfect gift


OEM Journal
Texas technology, pardners!


Engineering News


Automakers take nibbles out of PLM

Automotive joystick does everything but drive

Electric dragster sets speed record

For Formula 1, only computers need apply

In-car communications aim for universal approach

New materials, new simulation approaches

Tire design speeds through stages

Tough sensor makes gas burn better


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