Case Study: Defective Chips
Name ___________________________________________
Major: Electrical Engineering
Facts:
Engineer A is an electrical engineer working in quality control at a computer chip plant. Engineer As staff generally identifies defects in manufactured chips at a rate of 1 in 150. The general industry practice is for defective chips to be repaired or destroyed. Engineer B, Engineer As supervisor, recently announced that defective chips are to be destroyed, because it is more expensive to repair a defective chip than it is to make a new chip. Engineer A proceeds on the basis of Engineer Bs instructions. A few months later, Engineer B informs Engineer A that Engineer As quality control staff is rejecting too many chips, which is having an effect on overall plant output and, ultimately, company profitability. Engineer B advises Engineer As staff to allow a higher percentage of chips to pass through quality control. Engineer B notes that in the end, these issues can be best handled under the companys warranty policy under which the company agrees to replace defective chips based upon customer complaints. Engineer A has concerns as to whether this approach is in the best interest of the company or its clients.
(Acknowledgments: National Society of Professional Engineers, Case No. 08-2)
Question:
What are Engineer As ethical obligations under the circumstances
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