As a boy in Taiwan, Peter Wu (吳洵) loved to ride his bicycle to the airport and watch airplanes land and take off.
"What I see is amazing," he recalls. "All the pieces in an airplane cannot fly. But when you put them together, it flies."
Today, at 52, Wu has a key role in the process of putting the pieces together. He is vice president and chief scientist for Spirit Aerosystems, the firm formed last year after Toronto-based Onex Corp bought Boeing's commercial aircraft operations in Wichita and Oklahoma.
Company officials say Wu's job is to use new technologies to improve the quality, speed and safety of production. He recently received a patent for an improvement to a process for reducing the weight of aluminum used for the fuselages of Boeing 737 aircraft.
It involves peeling protective coating off large aluminum panels and dipping them into chemical tanks where a caustic solution etches part of the metal away, reducing its weight.
"Technology is critical to the success of the company," Wu said.
Wu, who came to the US at 25 to further his education, was honored last month by the Chinese Institute of Engineers. It presented him with its Asian American Engineer of the Year award for his work with environmentally safer processes and corrosion prevention on aircraft.
Wu went to work as a technical fellow for Boeing's commercial airplane division in Wichita in 1989. He became a Spirit vice president after the sale of the division last June.
When Wu arrived at Boeing, what is now the manufacturing process facility was a parking lot. Under his leadership, the company put up a 900,000m2 building where work on panels and other chemical processing, painting and priming are performed. Wu also developed many processes used in the building.
Bill Washburn, who works for him, said Wu is technically brilliant in both chemical engineering and composites, especially resins. He said Wu also brings vision and insight into what Spirit must develop or acquire "to support new product innovations" in the next two to 20 years.
Currently, Washburn said, Spirit is trying to understand what Boeing and Airbus, the two major commercial aircraft manufacturers, "are trying to do for their next generation single-aisle airplanes."
Spirit is working to figure out what materials the manufacturers might use and how Spirit might develop or acquire the technologies needed to win the contracts to supply those needs. And with a shortage of titanium and composite fiber resins, Spirit is trying to develop -- either alone or with an industrial or university partner -- alternative materials, Washburn said.
Although he has lived more than half his life in the US, Wu maintains close contact with his father and mother, calling them twice a day. His parents, Wu said, taught him to work hard, keep a positive attitude, and not to focus on himself but to "think about the big `we.'"
One person, no matter how smart he is, cannot make an airplane, Wu said. It takes many people working together, he said.
STILL HOPEFUL: Delayed payment of NT$5.35 billion from an Indian server client sent its earnings plunging last year, but the firm expects a gradual pickup ahead Asustek Computer Inc (華碩), the world’s No. 5 PC vendor, yesterday reported an 87 percent slump in net profit for last year, dragged by a massive overdue payment from an Indian cloud service provider. The Indian customer has delayed payment totaling NT$5.35 billion (US$162.7 million), Asustek chief financial officer Nick Wu (吳長榮) told an online earnings conference. Asustek shipped servers to India between April and June last year. The customer told Asustek that it is launching multiple fundraising projects and expected to repay the debt in the short term, Wu said. The Indian customer accounted for less than 10 percent to Asustek’s
‘DECENT RESULTS’: The company said it is confident thanks to an improving world economy and uptakes in new wireless and AI technologies, despite US uncertainty Pegatron Corp (和碩) yesterday said it plans to build a new server manufacturing factory in the US this year to address US President Donald Trump’s new tariff policy. That would be the second server production base for Pegatron in addition to the existing facilities in Taoyuan, the iPhone assembler said. Servers are one of the new businesses Pegatron has explored in recent years to develop a more balanced product lineup. “We aim to provide our services from a location in the vicinity of our customers,” Pegatron president and chief executive officer Gary Cheng (鄭光治) told an online earnings conference yesterday. “We
LEAK SOURCE? There would be concern over the possibility of tech leaks if TSMC were to form a joint venture to operate Intel’s factories, an analyst said Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday stayed mum after a report said that the chipmaker has pitched chip designers Nvidia Corp, Advanced Micro Devices Inc and Broadcom Inc about taking a stake in a joint venture to operate Intel Corp’s factories. Industry sources told the Central News Agency (CNA) that the possibility of TSMC proposing to operate Intel’s wafer fabs is low, as the Taiwanese chipmaker has always focused on its core business. There is also concern over possible technology leaks if TSMC were to form a joint venture to operate Intel’s factories, Concord Securities Co (康和證券) analyst Kerry Huang (黃志祺)
It was late morning and steam was rising from water tanks atop the colorful, but opaque-windowed, “soapland” sex parlors in a historic Tokyo red-light district. Walking through the narrow streets, camera in hand, was Beniko — a former sex worker who is trying to capture the spirit of the area once known as Yoshiwara through photography. “People often talk about this neighborhood having a ‘bad history,’” said Beniko, who goes by her nickname. “But the truth is that through the years people have lived here, made a life here, sometimes struggled to survive. I want to share that reality.” In its mid-17th to