I would suggest that that is more of a reflection on those engineers who checked their common sense at the door when they first entered college than a reflection on the engineering profession in general. There's one down the street who's wife walked over to ask me to fix their air handler that her husband had spent days trying to do. The husband is a mechanical engineer and a good one, but he disregarded his bounds when he got started on the AC and the wife got tired of a hot house. The truth is, Kurt is right, mainstream EE curriculums don't teach a dang thing about electrical wiring except for voltage drop calculations, skin effect, magnetic coupling, capacitance, etc, little of which is of any use to tradesmen or inspectors but let's just keep in mind that not all engineers succomb to this 'God' syndrome. Some remain conscious of their bounds and do not lose respect for neighboring professions and trades. When I learn that the seller of a house that I'm about to inspect is an engineer, I prepare myself for a 'long haul'. Marc