Williams's law on material costs

Appears in 3 lectures.

Appearances across the corpus

SMS_F2013_06 · Structural Materials Selection, Fall 2013 · §2.p3

"Whenever you first hear about the cost of a new material, that's the lowest cost it'll ever have."

One of the problems with this edge-defined film growth — I was out there at that lab, and they have nice machines and it works, but it's really slow. When you're pulling something that thin and that light, you don't make very many pounds per hour. This is where you get to Sprague's law: whenever you first hear about a new material, that's the best properties you'll ever have. And Williams's corollary: whenever you first hear about the cost of a new material, that's the lowest cost it'll ever have.

DP_S2012_10 · Deformation Processing, Spring 2012 · §2.p3

Jim Williams's corollary to Sprague's law: the first quoted cost of a new material is the lowest it will ever be.

Thinking statistically, it's going to be weak. A chain is as strong as its weakest link. If I go to higher temperatures, it becomes weaker with more vacancies. If I have lots of nanotubes — yes, ten nanotubes are probably ten times stronger than one nanotube, but that doesn't mean it'll be 3 million PSI, because it's still per unit area. And if I still have a flaw — there was a guy, head of materials at GE aircraft engines in Cincinnati, Bob Sprague back in the 1970s. He was the one who said: when you first hear about the properties of a new material, write it down — those are the best properties the material will ever have. And there's the Jim Williams corollary. Jim Williams was Dean at Ohio State and department head at Carnegie Mellon, and is an expert on titanium. He became head of materials at GE aircraft engines in the 1990s, after Sprague. Jim's corollary: whenever you first hear about the cost of a new material, write it down, because that's the lowest cost the material will ever have.

WIE_F2015_02 · What is Engineering, Fall 2015 · §1.p2

Jim Williams' corollary to Sprague: first-quoted cost is the lowest cost a material will ever have. Tom positions Williams as a titanium metallurgist who succeeded Sprague at GE.

Materials and new materials, or whatever you read in the MIT news and see on the screens at MIT — most of this is oversold. Ninety-eight percent of it is a sales job, and it's not really quite that great. There's a quote that I like. There was a guy at General Electric in Cincinnati where they make aircraft engines, head of materials, name was Robert Sprague. And Robert Sprague had a quote: whenever you first hear about a new material, write it down, because those are the best properties that material will ever have. And then there's Jim Williams' corollary. Jim Williams was a titanium metallurgist who became department head at Carnegie Mellon and Dean at Ohio State, and then he replaced Bob Sprague at General Electric. Jim Williams says his corollary to Bob Sprague's quote is: whenever you first hear about the cost of a new material, write it down, because that's the lowest price the material will ever have.