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Terry Mackenzie-hoy

Terry Mackenzie-hoy

Mackenzie-Hoy is a consulting acoustics and electrical engineer – machoy@iafrica.com

The most significant invention 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     7th July 2023 What do you think is the most significant invention of recent times? That is to say, in the last 100 years. What invention stands out as the most life-changing, that had the greatest influence, the device which, had it not been invented, would have made our lives very  difficult. Please note: I’m... 

End of Second World War

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     30th June 2023 We won’t go into all the countries that fought in the Second World War other than to say the British fought the Germans and the Germans fought the British and subsequently the British fought the Italians and so on. What was unusual in war is that, whereas most respectable countries know when... 

King Tut

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     23rd June 2023 This year is the 101st since the discovery of Tutankhamun. For those of you who don’t know, Tutankhamun was an Egyptian pharaoh who ruled over Egypt for a very short period of about ten years. He was buried in Egypt and, essentially, his body was forgotten. It happens that, at the end of the last... 

Quo vadis?

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     16th June 2023 I have in previous columns pretty much avoided writing about how stupid the South African government has been with regard to the current situation. It is almost beyond belief that a government, any government, should place itself in a position where the people it is supposed to look after and... 

Waiting room tale – Part 2 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     9th June 2023 In last week’s instalment of this column, I had injured my foot and gone to the hospital to have it seen to. I had made one visit, at the end of which (after waiting many hours) I was sent home to come back on the following Friday. I had made this visit and again been sent off without seeing... 

Hanging about in waiting room

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     2nd June 2023 I have had more than the usual number of injuries over my 67-year life. This is not a bad thing, since it really demonstrates a life of experience. It might also be demonstrating a life of carelessness, but that is for others to judge. Recently, the following happened. I was due to go to a clinic... 

Okavango adventures

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     26th May 2023 I’m two years younger than my brother; however, because of the arrangement that existed at the time, I went to school one year after him instead of two years. This, in turn, meant I was young, compared with my classmates. This was an advantage in some ways because I learned more things more... 

Summer storms in Joburg

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     19th May 2023 Johannesburg is a very large city. I’m not sure of the exact dimensions but I think it is at least 1 500 km2. Various cloudbursts which occur all over South Africa vary from Cape Town (continuous and slightly strong to mild) to Durban (brief storms) to many others, but anybody who grew up in... 

Worse than it’s ever been 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     12th May 2023 At the time of writing this article, there is loadshedding; the power is off intermittently for two to four hours at all locations in South Africa. This is a regular occurrence, and it represents a complete failure to provide an adequate power supply. Throughout the country, situations will occur... 

More stories about the Navy

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     5th May 2023 During my national service, when I was stationed at Durban Naval Command, interesting events happened from time to time. Before I continue, I should point out to those who are new to this column that my national service took place over two years in the late 1970s. So,  what I’m writing about... 

Dropping bombs – Part 2 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     28th April 2023 In last week’s piece about disposing of bombs at sea, I explained how, when in the South African Navy, I was the engineering officer and had accompanied a ship offshore, where, at the 10 km location, we disposed of bombs that were no longer needed by the South African Navy. There were 200 bombs... 

Dropping bombs – Part 1

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     21st April 2023 One of the more interesting and terrifying occupations I had in the South African Navy involved the disposal of bombs off the Durban coastline. In fact, using the description “dropping bombs off the Durban coastline” sounds so formal and organised; the actual process was so informal and more or... 

Future of wild animals 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     14th April 2023 Jeremy Clarkson, as you should know, is an English journalist and British TV personality, who, for several years, presented a television programme which dealt with motor vehicles called Top Gear. James May and Richard Hammond assisted him. Clarkson has now changed to a new programme which has... 

Need to up nuclear generation

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     7th April 2023 It is a fact that electricity has only been available for about 120 years. This means, for example, that there was no electricity during the South African War and during the Crimean War, and the many previous wars. Entire nations lived without electricity and your great-grandparents probably... 

Future of motor transport

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     31st March 2023 We all have seen documentation about the prospects that car manufacturers are providing or hope to provide as far as new developments in cars are concerned. Simply put, it is the promise, or at least the prediction, that cars are all going to move from being fossil fuel driven to being electric... 

Electricity 50 years from now

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     24th March 2023 The electrical system that we had 50 years ago is effectively the one that existed in 1973. It is startling to me to realise that this is 50 years ago; however, such is the case. The electrical system effectively had electric lights which were incandescent lamps (the smallest of which was about... 

Forgotten electronics

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     17th March 2023 Over the various years, there have been a number of instances of electronic devices which have been invented that have been widely used and then which have been surpassed and finally overtaken by other electronic devices to the point that they have been completely forgotten. It is probably not... 

Dark days

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     10th March 2023 In many newspapers and in Engineering News & Mining Weekly itself, there are references to the collapse of the power grid. Just so that we all understand what we are talking about, the grid is the electrical system which supplies electricity (in this case) to South Africa. As South Africa draws... 

Even more adventures in the Defence Force

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     3rd March 2023 This is the third article concerning my time doing my national service, of which I spent the major part of two years between 1975 and 1977 at the Durban Naval Command, which was established to supply a navy base to Durban and to control operations of small craft and employees responsible for the... 

More adventures in the Navy 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     24th February 2023 In the previous column, I wrote about being in the Navy nearly 30 years ago. After reviewing, I find it is closer to 50 years ago. A thing to remember is that, 50 years ago, things were different. This is, of course, self-explanatory, but not as obvious as it seems. For example, Microsoft had... 

Adventures in Defence Force 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     17th February 2023 In this and two further columns, I will list how it was to be in the South African Defence Force as a national serviceman, all of which took place 30 years ago. Before we go any further, I want to make something perfectly clear: I didn’t volunteer for the South African Defence Force. Had I... 

Two years before the mast

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     10th February 2023 As time passes, people are forgetting that there was a time when all white men in South Africa had to do national service. When the requirement for doing national service first began (around 1969), the period of national service was nine months. Essentially what was required was that a young man... 

Gone to the dogs 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     3rd February 2023 In 1994, South Africa probably had the best power system in the world. It was well-run; the power was never disconnected; it was stable and reliable; and the concept of the power being off for any length of time was absolutely unthinkable. The South African power system was so good that I went to... 

Negative things . . . 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     27th January 2023 Let us assume that we have to evaluate the actual quantity of a given thing. Let us say the given thing is the amount of time spent on a highway or the distance spent on a road. We could also consider the amount of time spent delivering some quantity. Let us say the quantity is electricity. We... 

Broekman the bantam

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     20th January 2023 There are some stories which are quite old, as in more than 100 years old, and which deserve to be told, but which actually have no real value. It’s all very well telling a story about what happened in a battle, or about how somebody crossed a river, or how a new dwelling was created, but few... 

Hero to zero

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     16th December 2022 So, back in the day, the situation regarding Eskom was like this: the State-owned utility was in such good condition that a national power failure was unthinkable. Not only this – the price of electricity was so low that the concept of electricity having a significant cost effect on any user was... 

Power vacuum 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     9th December 2022 Eskom’s COO, Jan Oberholzer, is going to retire in April 2023, which is about five months from now. He has been working for the State-owned electricity utility for over 30 years. This is to be expected. After all, not everybody can work forever, and everybody needs a break. It is a particularly... 

All at sea 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     2nd December 2022 Sometimes there are things which seem to be very sensible but which, if you look at them a little bit more closely, are not sensible at all. An example would be a computer system which is mounted in the sea. By computer system I mean interconnected terminals mounted in the ocean. Visually, these... 

The end of war 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     25th November 2022 The Second World War was coming to an end in 1945. For it to end, the Japanese had to surrender; however, the Japanese did not have surrender as part of their philosophy in life. Consequently, the allies (Americans, French, English, besides others) faced a long and bloody war before the end... 

Searching for Einstein

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     18th November 2022 It is 80 years since 1942, which was the middle of World War II. Even 80 years later, we don’t have to ask one another which was World War II, or when it happened, or who fought in it, or when it started, or when it ended. Well, not unless we are quite young or quite ignorant. It is surprising... 

Dry-cooled power stations 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     11th November 2022 Once completed, Medupi will be both the fourth-largest power station and the biggest dry-cooled power station in the world. It will have a capacity of 4 764 MW. Dry-cooled power stations, as opposed to power stations which are cooled by steam or gas, are built mainly because of a shortage of... 

The cost of corruption

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     4th November 2022 People who have been taking note of the latest developments will know that the South African government has set up a programme whereby it is going to allow a group of selected people to resolve the State capture corruption issue. Corrupt individuals have been identified and government has made... 

Our power system

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     28th October 2022 All over South Africa, the power is going off – not accidentally; it is being switched off. Interruptions are normally between two hours and two-and-a-half hours at a time. The power interruptions occur on Saturdays, Sundays and during weekdays. It is a fact that this hasn’t occurred before in... 

Failure to launch

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     21st October 2022 At the turn of this century, there were many predictions about what was going to happen in terms of inventions which would reach one 100 years. Among the predictions were quite a number about what would change. For example, it was predicted that we would see the widespread launch of electric... 

The final chapter

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     14th October 2022 In the last three columns, I wrote about how I worked for Eskom Eastern Cape as chief engineer for operations. The whole of Eskom and the Eastern Cape, as part of it, had been split into separate operating groups. Each division operated in separate areas, specifically South Cape, Free State,... 

Eskom in 1987 . . . 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     23rd September 2022 In the last two articles, I wrote about how I went to work for Eskom in the Eastern Cape as the chief electrical engineer: operations. This was a fabulous job. Not only was I paid twice the going rate for a professional engineer, but I had access to large amounts of money. The whole of the... 

Eskom 2: A backward glance

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     16th September 2022 In the previous article (for those of you foolish enough not to have read it), I wrote how I went to work for State-owned electricity utility Eskom as senior engineer foroperations in 1988. It was an incredibly fortunate time; Eskom had just changed from being a single monolithic organisation... 

Whither, Eskom? 

By: Terry Mackenzie-hoy     9th September 2022 It’s 34 years since I worked for State-owned power utility Eskom. At the time, I was working for a consulting engineering practice in East London. It was a very noble consulting engineering practice and had very interesting partners and it was obvious (judging from the smart cars they drove) that... 

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