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Inventing the Future: An Interview with Dr. Ed Schweitzer
August 20, 2025 | Barry Matties, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 1 minute
Dr. Edmund O. Schweitzer III, founder of Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories (SEL), has a corner office in the company’s world headquarters in Pullman, Washington. Forty-two years after his SEL-21—the first microprocessor-based digital protective relay—ushered in a new era of power-system protection, he has forever changed the way the world safeguards its electric grids.
In this fascinating three-hour conversation, Dr. Schweitzer reveals that he remains excited to get to work each day, unpacking the “better, cheaper, faster, simpler” mantra that’s still driving SEL’s innovation, and the culture glue that keeps more than 7,000 employee-owners rowing in unison. He’s a visionary who believes strongly in creativity and refuses to rest on yesterday’s breakthroughs.
Barry Matties: Ed, let’s start by talking about your early career. You remember the days when many OEMs manufactured their own printed circuit boards.
Ed Schweitzer: In fact, I worked in one. I grew up in the Chicago area, and while I was in college, around 1966, I worked for Nuclear Chicago, a company that made radiation counters, Geiger counters, film badges—pretty much anything nuclear. They also made all their own circuit boards.
These were the newer days of integrated circuits. At the time, an op-amp (operational amplifier) and a little TO-5 (transistor package) would cost five bucks, which would be $50 today. But it was better, cheaper, faster, and simpler than trying to do it with a 12AT7 vacuum tube.
Matties: If you counted every time you've said “better, cheaper, faster, simpler” in your life, there’s not a calculator big enough.
Schweitzer: Probably not, but that's what we ought to be doing.
Matties: What resistance did you get when you challenged conventional thinking, and how did that surprise you?
To read the entire interview, which appeared in the August 2025 issue of PCB007 Magazine, click here.
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Rachael Temple - AlltematedSuggested Items
Pullman School District Sale of Aquatic Center to SEL Finalized
12/22/2025 | SELThe Pullman School District is pleased to announce the finalized sale of the Pullman Aquatic & Fitness Center to Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories (SEL), marking a new chapter for the facility as it celebrates its 25th year of operation.
SEL Names New Vice President of Engineering Services
11/25/2025 | Schweitzer Engineering LaboratoriesSchweitzer Engineering Laboratories (SEL) has appointed Ashok Balasubramanian as Vice President of Engineering Services.
SEL Announces Expansion Projects in Idaho and North Carolina
10/28/2025 | SELSchweitzer Engineering Laboratories (SEL) is adding 370,000 square feet of new and expanded facilities to locations in Moscow and Boise, Idaho, and Charlotte, North Carolina.
SEL: Revolutionizing PCB Production Through MES, Partnerships, and Vision
08/21/2025 | Barry Matties, I-Connect007Two years ago, we visited Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories (SEL) to better understand its new captive greenfield PCB facility. We recently returned, this time to discuss how this bold vision has transformed the industry. Barry Matties met with John Hendrickson, engineering director, and Jessi Hall, vice president of vertical integration, to discuss the transformative capabilities of Factory Core, SEL’s custom manufacturing execution system (MES), which allows for real-time monitoring of workflow and machine performance, and has led to impressive improvements in quality and cost efficiency.
SEL Index of Freedom Highlights Top States for Business and Trade
07/15/2025 | SELSchweitzer Engineering Laboratories (SEL), a global leader in power system protection, automation and control solutions, has released the 2025 SEL Index of Freedom, an evaluation of the business climate across the 50 U.S. states.