Turbo encabulator
The turbo encabulator is a fictional electromechanical machine with a satirical technobabble description that became a famous in-joke among engineers after it was published by the British Institution of Electrical Engineers in their Students' Quarterly Journal in 1944. Technical documentation has been written for the non-existent machine, and there are a number of parody marketing videos.
History


An early popular American reference to the turbo encabulator appeared in an article by New York lawyer Bernard Salwen in the April 15, 1946, issue of Time magazine. Part of Salwen's job was to review technical manuscripts, including an Arthur D. Little Industrial Bulletin which had reprinted Quick's piece, and he was amused enough by it to include the description in his article.
In response to a letter printed in the May 6 issue of Time from W. E. Habig of Madison, N.J. asking "What is a 'dingle arm'?”, the editors described it as "An adjunct to the turbo-encabulator, employed whenever a barescent skor motion is required." A month later a response to reader mail on the feature appeared in the June 3, 1946 issue:
In 1962 a turbo encabulator data sheet was created by engineers at General Electric's Instrument Department, in West Lynn, Massachusetts. It quoted from the previous sources and was inserted into the General Electric Handbook. The turbo encabulator data sheet had the same format as the other pages in the G.E. Handbook. The engineers added "Shure Stat" in "Technical Features", which was peculiar only to the Instrument Department, and included the first known graphic representation of a "manufactured" turbo encabulator using parts made at the Instrument Department.
Circa 1977, Bud Haggart, an actor who appeared in many industrial training films in and around Detroit, performed in the first film realization of the description and operation of the turbo encabulator, using a truncated script adapted from Quick's article. Haggart convinced director Dave Rondot and the film crew to stay after the filming of an actual GMC Trucks project training film to realize the turbo encabulator spot.
Another version was done by Mike Kraft, who had previously worked with Bud Haggart and known as the "retro encabulator" using an Allen-Bradley motor control center and referencing other brands owned by Rockwell Automation. This version was put online and made its way to eBaum’s World, where it gained quite a bit of notoriety.
The term, in both textual and video format, has continued to appear in newer media.
In 2022, Mike Kraft returned to narrate another video describing the "SANS ICS HyperEncabulator", making many references to previous versions.
Significance
The turbo encabulator has become a humorous example of obfuscation by excessive jargon in the fields of science and engineering. The term has also been used as a classic example of technobabble.
See also
- Blinkenlights – Hacker jargon for computerised blinking lights
- Thiotimoline – Fictional organic compound from short stories by Isaac Asimov
- This Island Earth – 1955 film by Jack Arnold and Joseph M. Newman
- Unobtainium – Rare or fictional material
- Write-only memory (joke) – Humorous fictional type of computer memory
- Widget (economics) – Abstract name for a unit of production
References
External links
- Copy, with errors, of original article, prepared by Arthur D. Little
- Digital archive of original article
- Selected videos
First four presented by Bud Haggart.
- Turbo Encabulator, original filmed version
- Chrysler Turbo Encabulator
- Chrysler Turbo Encabulator, new version
- Rockwell Turbo Encabulator
- Rockwell Retro Encabulator
- SANS ICS Hyper Encabulator (also uses Mike Kraft who was the narrator in the Rockwell Retro Encabulator video)