Complex systems aren’t just made of components — they’re made of assumptions.
Most repair attempts follow the logic of replacement: if something doesn’t work, swap the part. That works when problems are simple. But when systems are integrated — like modern vehicles, RVs, yachts, or homes — failures often come from interactions, not from single components.
Software updates change communication protocols. Data lines interfere with each other. Logic conflicts appear only under certain conditions. These are the failures that standard procedures miss.
My work begins where others stop. I analyze not just what failed — but what changed. I look at the system as it was, and as it is now. That’s what makes recovery possible.