How I Became Ultra Rich Using a Reconstruction System-Chapter 244: The Bench Comes First

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Chapter 244: The Bench Comes First

The surge generator arrived on a pallet the size of a small refrigerator.

It showed up at 8:12 a.m., wheeled in through the freight elevator with a shipping manifest thicker than most design specs. Hana was there to receive it, tablet in one hand, pen in the other, checking serial numbers before the plastic wrap was even fully cut away.

"Hold," she said to the delivery crew when one of them reached for a box cutter.

They froze.

Hana crouched, verified the crate seal number against the manifest, then nodded once. "Now."

The plastic came off in careful strips. No tearing. No rushing.

Jun arrived halfway through the unpacking, coffee still untouched in his hand. He didn’t greet anyone. He went straight to the data plate on the side of the surge generator and bent down to read it.

"Good," he muttered. "Industrial spec. Not the lab toy version."

Maria appeared behind him with a clipboard already filled out.

"Clearance," she said. "If this thing ever needs servicing, we need room to get a tech in without climbing over cables."

Jun glanced at the floor. The taped outline Hana had added the night before showed a buffer zone around the bench area, wide enough for two people to stand without touching equipment.

"Fine," Jun said. "We’ll keep it."

They didn’t celebrate the arrival. They treated it like a responsibility.

The bench area took shape fast, but not casually. Every piece of equipment was logged before it touched the floor. Load banks. Power analyzers. Isolation transformers. Environmental sensors. All of it tagged, signed in, and photographed for internal records—not marketing, not memory.

Victor arrived mid-morning and stood at the edge of the bench area, hands behind his back, watching.

"You’re building evidence," he said.

Jun didn’t look up from bolting the bench frame to the floor. "We’re building a bench."

Victor’s mouth twitched. "Same thing, if you do it right."

Maria watched the cable routing like a hawk. She stopped one engineer mid-step.

"No loops under the bench," she said. "Someone will kick it. They always do."

The engineer opened his mouth to argue, then closed it and rerouted the cable along the wall.

Hana stood off to the side, updating the internal asset register in real time. She didn’t trust memory. She trusted timestamps.

By noon, the bench existed.

It wasn’t impressive. It wasn’t clean in the aesthetic sense. It was dense, functional, and slightly intimidating in the way serious workspaces always were. Cables ran in straight lines. Labels were legible. Power paths were obvious.

Jun wiped his hands on a rag and leaned back.

"This bench," he said, "is more important than the Autodoc."

Maria nodded. "Because this one ships."

Victor added, "And because this one will be inspected."

Timothy arrived quietly and stood at the edge of the bench area, watching the team without interrupting.

Elena noticed him and walked over.

"They’re doing it right," she said.

Timothy nodded. "They’re uncomfortable."

"That’s the signal," Elena replied.

They didn’t power anything on yet.

Elena insisted on a bench readiness review before the first switch was flipped.

They stood in a rough semicircle around the setup.

Jun led it.

"Power path," he said, pointing. "Mains here. Isolation here. Surge injection here. Load bank here. Measurement points labeled and redundant."

Victor asked, "Redundant how."

Jun gestured to two analyzers. "Primary and secondary. If they disagree, we stop."

Maria added, "And the bench has its own service kit. Nothing borrowed. Nothing shared."

Hana chimed in. "Access to this area is logged separately from the prototype room. Different rules."

Elena nodded. "Good."

Only after that did Jun nod to his engineer.

"Power on bench," he said.

The bench came alive with a low hum and status lights. Nothing sparked. Nothing chirped. Everything behaved like it should.

Maria checked the emergency cutoff and pressed it once.

The bench went dead instantly.

She reset it and logged the response time.

"Acceptable," she said.

Victor watched, satisfied.

That afternoon, Jun locked himself and two engineers into a conference room and started the first power module schematic review.

Not the fun kind.

They didn’t talk about efficiency curves or clever layouts. They talked about heat paths, derating, and failure modes.

"What happens if the input sags repeatedly," Jun asked.

One engineer answered, "We shut down."

Jun shook his head. "Not good enough. How fast. How often. What state do we recover to."

The engineer adjusted. "We detect sag over threshold for X milliseconds, enter protective mode, log event, attempt restart after cooldown."

Victor sat in on the review, pen moving slowly.

"Language," he said. "Avoid ’attempt.’ Use ’initiates controlled restart sequence.’ Attempt sounds like guessing."

The engineer sighed, then rewrote the line.

Maria leaned over the table and pointed at the enclosure drawing.

"That panel," she said. "If that’s held by six screws, a tech will drop one."

Jun rubbed his face. "What do you want, captive fasteners."

"Yes," Maria said. "And different head sizes for different access levels."

Victor nodded. "That’s defensible. Limits untrained access."

Jun gave up fighting it. "Fine. Captive fasteners."

By late afternoon, the first draft of the P1 power module spec was ugly and honest.

No marketing words.

No promises they couldn’t keep.

Elena reviewed it at 5:40 p.m., standing, arms crossed.

She read every line.

"You’ve underpromised," she said finally.

Jun shrugged. "Good."

She looked at Victor. "Anything that scares you."

Victor tapped one paragraph. "This line about ’intended integration into diagnostic platforms’—tighten it. Someone will stretch that."

Elena nodded. "Fix it."

She looked at Maria. "Service."

Maria flipped to her section. "Eight-minute swap is aggressive but possible if we don’t lie to ourselves."

Elena looked at Jun.

Jun didn’t flinch. "We won’t lie."

Timothy watched all of it without stepping in.

That night, the Autodoc stayed dark.

No one asked to run it.

The next week settled into a pattern.

Mornings belonged to the bench.

Afternoons belonged to documentation.

No one talked about timelines outside the room. No one hinted at future products. The Autodoc became background noise—still there, still locked, still humming occasionally during approved test windows, but no longer the center of gravity.

That was deliberate.

The first P1 board prototype arrived nine days later.

It came in a static bag with a handwritten label and a revision number that ended in "A0," which everyone understood meant "don’t trust this."

Jun held it like it might bite.

"This board," he said, "is allowed to fail."

Maria looked at him. "But not quietly."

They mounted it on the bench and connected it with exaggerated care.

Victor plugged in his dongle and armed logging.

SESSION ID: TGMS-P1-0001

"No shortcuts," he said.

They ran the first power-up at half load.

Nothing happened.

Which was exactly what they wanted.

Jun nodded. "Increase load."

They did.

The module warmed. The thermal camera showed heat where it was supposed to be.

Maria watched the connectors. "No movement."

Victor watched the logs. "No anomalies."

They pushed it harder.

A sag event was injected.

The module dipped, logged, recovered.

Maria smiled despite herself.

"Again," Jun said.

They repeated it until the bench smelled faintly of warm electronics.

On the fifth run, the module shut down longer than expected.

Jun leaned in. "That’s not right."

Victor leaned closer. "Log it."

The system had already done so.

SHUTDOWN EVENT: PROTECTIVE

RECOVERY TIME: 3.4s

EXPECTED: ≤2.0s

Jun swore under his breath.

Maria didn’t react. "What’s the cause."

Jun traced it on the schematic. "Controller debounce. Too conservative."

Victor looked at him. "Fixable."

Jun nodded. "Yes."

Elena watched from the doorway.

"Document it," she said. "Then fix it."

No one argued.

By the end of the week, the team had more red marks than green ones.

And they were proud of it.

A meeting request came in from outside TG MedSystems late Friday afternoon.

Hana intercepted it before it hit anyone else’s calendar.

She walked into Elena’s office and closed the door.

"Corporate strategy wants an update," she said. "Not a tour. A slide deck."

Elena didn’t look up from the document she was reviewing. "No."

Hana waited. "They’ll push."

Elena looked up now. "Then you push back."

Hana nodded. "What do I tell them."

Elena’s voice stayed calm. "We’re building regulated components. There’s nothing to update until there’s something registered."

Hana smiled thinly. "They won’t like that."

Elena shrugged. "They don’t have to."

Timothy backed that decision without discussion.

He sent one email.

No demos. No decks. When we have something that can survive scrutiny, you’ll be informed.

It didn’t make him popular.

He didn’t care.

Two weeks in, the bench logs told a story.

Not a good one. An honest one.

The first revision of the P1 module overheated under sustained sag cycles. The second revision fixed that but introduced a noise issue that would fail EMC pre-check. The third revision passed both but took eleven minutes to swap because the enclosure design fought Maria at every step.

Maria won that fight.

Jun didn’t enjoy it, but he respected it.

By the time the fourth revision arrived, the swap took seven minutes and thirty seconds.

Maria timed it herself, intentionally fumbling one screw to simulate fatigue.

"Acceptable," she said.

Victor reviewed the logs that night and wrote a memo titled Observed Behavior Under Stress — P1 Module (Internal).

It was dry. It was brutal. It would save them later.

Elena pinned it to the wall beside the bench.

"Remember this," she said to the team. "This is what real progress looks like."

The Autodoc remained locked and untouched for twelve straight days.

No one complained.

The ladder was working.

And for the first time since TG MedSystems had stopped being an idea and started being a burden, the floor didn’t feel empty.

It felt like a place where something unglamorous and durable was being built on purpose.

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