Wired to Build

Proven, Not Just Passed: Electrical Testing with Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed (Megger)

53 min · 24. juni 2026
episode Proven, Not Just Passed: Electrical Testing with Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed (Megger) cover

Beskrivelse

The work looked right. The question is whether it was. In Part 2, Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed gets into the mechanics of how electrical systems actually fail — and why more than half the time, the cause traces back to something that happened during construction. Not a bad design. Not a faulty component. The build itself. We go inside the insulation resistance test: what it measures, what it catches, and what slips through when nobody's running one. We talk through what the silver tsunami actually means for crews in the field — what gets lost when the experienced hands walk out, and how that gap shows up months or years after handoff. Ahmed shares the story of two solar sites, same company, same equipment, one crew running clean for five years and one getting called back every month — the only difference being the experience of the people who built it. From there we look forward: data centers wired end to end with sensors, telemetry outpacing human review, and AI increasingly doing what no person can do fast enough. Ahmed is optimistic. So am I. But the throughline doesn't change — none of it works if the work wasn't proven right at the start. This is Part 2 of 2. Start with Part 1 if you haven't. https://open.spotify.com/episode/2U5nI8TNxRscnRwYYjS1KB?si=792e12a43b094e13 Guest: Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed [https://www.linkedin.com/in/a-rasheed247/] — Industry Director at Megger [https://www.megger.com/], ~18 years in electrical test & measurement. PhD in electrical engineering (testing, sensors, multi-sensor integration with AI). Sits on standards committees for NETA, IEEE, IEC, and BSI. Resources mentioned * NETA [https://www.netaworld.org/home]— InterNational Electrical Testing Association * IEEE [https://www.ieee.org/] * IEC [https://iec.ch/homepage] * BSI [https://www.bsigroup.com/] * AVO Training Institute [https://www.avotraining.com/] (Dallas)

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43 episoder

episode Proven, Not Just Passed: Electrical Testing with Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed (Megger) cover

Proven, Not Just Passed: Electrical Testing with Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed (Megger)

The work looked right. The question is whether it was. In Part 2, Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed gets into the mechanics of how electrical systems actually fail — and why more than half the time, the cause traces back to something that happened during construction. Not a bad design. Not a faulty component. The build itself. We go inside the insulation resistance test: what it measures, what it catches, and what slips through when nobody's running one. We talk through what the silver tsunami actually means for crews in the field — what gets lost when the experienced hands walk out, and how that gap shows up months or years after handoff. Ahmed shares the story of two solar sites, same company, same equipment, one crew running clean for five years and one getting called back every month — the only difference being the experience of the people who built it. From there we look forward: data centers wired end to end with sensors, telemetry outpacing human review, and AI increasingly doing what no person can do fast enough. Ahmed is optimistic. So am I. But the throughline doesn't change — none of it works if the work wasn't proven right at the start. This is Part 2 of 2. Start with Part 1 if you haven't. https://open.spotify.com/episode/2U5nI8TNxRscnRwYYjS1KB?si=792e12a43b094e13 Guest: Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed [https://www.linkedin.com/in/a-rasheed247/] — Industry Director at Megger [https://www.megger.com/], ~18 years in electrical test & measurement. PhD in electrical engineering (testing, sensors, multi-sensor integration with AI). Sits on standards committees for NETA, IEEE, IEC, and BSI. Resources mentioned * NETA [https://www.netaworld.org/home]— InterNational Electrical Testing Association * IEEE [https://www.ieee.org/] * IEC [https://iec.ch/homepage] * BSI [https://www.bsigroup.com/] * AVO Training Institute [https://www.avotraining.com/] (Dallas)

24. juni 202653 min
episode Guest Intro - Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed | Megger cover

Guest Intro - Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed | Megger

What does it actually mean to know electrical work was done right? Not hope. Not assume. Know. Dr. Ahmed El-Rasheed [https://www.linkedin.com/in/a-rasheed247/] has spent his career inside the world of electrical testing and measurement. As Industry Director at Megger [https://www.megger.com/], he works at the intersection of power systems, field practice, and the instruments used to verify that critical infrastructure is ready to perform. In Part 1, Ahmed and Nick cover: * How Ahmed’s path from taking apart broken VCRs to electrical engineering shaped the way he thinks about measurement * Why Megger became synonymous with insulation resistance testing in the electrical trades * The difference between work being done and work being proven * What Ahmed’s research with Jaguar taught him about visual completion versus verified quality * Why electrical testing matters before energizing data centers, hospitals, power stations, and other critical infrastructure * How renewables, HVDC, bidirectional power flow, and data center demand are changing the complexity of the grid * Why certainty, skilled labor, and documentation matter more as the margin for error gets smaller Part 2 picks up where this leaves off: testing culture, commissioning, workforce readiness, and what it takes to hold a higher standard in the field before the lights come on. Support the show! * Make sure to like, subscribe, and share your thoughts. * Visit our founding sponsor at www.avicado.com [http://www.avicado.com/]

10. juni 202634 min
episode Field Notes 03 - Slow is Smooth, Smooth is Fast cover

Field Notes 03 - Slow is Smooth, Smooth is Fast

"Slow is smooth. Smooth is fast." You've heard it on a call, on a jobsite, in a review — and nobody ever asks what it means. We just nod. This Field Note is about why that phrase keeps resurfacing right now. The built world is accelerating — bigger projects, tighter schedules, less room for error — and the cost of getting things wrong is climbing. But most failures don't begin when something breaks. They begin weeks or months earlier, in a skipped verification, an assumption, a rushed review. Something that saved a few minutes. Until it didn't. Everybody wants acceleration. Very few people talk about recovery. A short one on why speed without control eventually creates its own delay. Field Notes. No guests. Just what the work is teaching us.

4. juni 20262 min
episode Should Tech Adoption Be Disruptive or Constructive with Jeff Sample cover

Should Tech Adoption Be Disruptive or Constructive with Jeff Sample

Most construction technology conversations ask the wrong question. They ask why adoption is slow. Jeff Sample asks something harder: are we even solving the right problem? Jeff [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ironmanofit/] is Senior Industry Development Manager for Trades at Bluebeam [https://www.bluebeam.com/] and host of The ConTech Crew [https://thecontechcrew.com/] — a technologist with 30 years in IT who found construction a decade ago and never left. His perspective crosses job sites, startups, and strategy in a way most people in this industry never get. In Part 2, Nick [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickcaravella/]and Jeff get into: why disruption is a byproduct and not a goal — and what the Uber story actually teaches us. Why construction's technology problem is a translation problem, not an adoption problem. What separates high-performing crews from struggling ones when it comes to innovation. Why proximity to the work is non-negotiable for anyone trying to change how building gets done. And what the next generation of builders needs from the people ahead of them. What you'll walk away with: a cleaner frame for why good tools fail in the field, and a sharper sense of what it actually takes to connect leadership intent to field reality. Support the show! * Make sure to like, subscribe, and share your thoughts * Visit our founding sponsor at www.avicado.com [www.avicado.com]

27. maj 202645 min
episode Field Notes 02 | What It Takes To Be Ready cover

Field Notes 02 | What It Takes To Be Ready

The industry knows the barriers. Community opposition. Workforce gaps. Power constraints. Access. Everyone in the room at DICE this week could name them. But naming barriers isn't the same as being ready to clear them. In this Field Note, Nick Caravella [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickcaravella/] breaks down what readiness actually requires in data center construction — and why the industry keeps confusing hitting a schedule date with actually being prepared to finish the work. Readiness isn't a milestone. It's a condition. And until we stop using the schedule as a substitute for that condition, we'll keep handing over buildings that aren't done — we just ran out of time to pretend otherwise. Three conditions this episode examines:— The schedule problem: why the date gives you somewhere to hide— The workforce problem: people don't fall from the sky— The community problem: they're not an obstacle, they're a condition of completion Field Notes. No guests. Just what the work is teaching us.

19. maj 20263 min