LordMorpheus
Diamond Member
- Aug 14, 2002
 
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Originally posted by: jaydee
I am a Soph EE major just finishing up my first co-op with an consulting engineering firm working with Civil E's and Chem E's (which I've been working as) and I go to a school that's 50% Mech E's, so I'd say I'm pretty well rounded in the engineering field. I live ok, I'm going to have to take out my first non-subsidized loan for this quarter, but it should be my last as well. I feel confident that my financial situation will be in good shape upon graduation in a couple years.
My co-op, what do I do?
Civil E:
I work a lot with AutoCAD doing minor league stuff like text edits, playing with linetypes, ect. I've also taken United States Geological Survey (USGS) topography maps and converting cross-sectional areas to elevation drawings to see how (for example) a river looks and use USGS annual flood data to determine the predictability of flood levels.
Drawing elevations of a river using echo soundings over time (2-3 year intervals) to determine whether the river has accumulated deposition or if it scours over time.
Proof-reading technical papers before they go out as reports.
Assorted landfill stuff like Leachate Intercept Trenches (LIT's), the different layers, ect.
Chem E:
Reading/interpreting analytical data reports containing the amounts of mainly aromatic compouds.
EE:
Designing lights to go in a parking lot.
If you want elaboration on any of these, feel free to PM.
Hope this helps,
Jim
sounds like a consulting engineer.
I interned at a Consulting Engineering firm one summer. I still am going into engineering, I just won't apply for a job at a consulting place . . . most of what they do is take specs from a client, and then make sure whatever lights/power/sewer/etc. the client is building conforms to every federal code imaginable.
I would rather work in product design or something . . at my job last summer (not an internship) our engineers did interesting stuff like designing gigantic automated shrink-wrappers (you should see these, they are amazing. The principal of a shrink wrapper is this: cover the target in a plastic bag, heat the bag so it shrinks around the target. You have to start with a bag that more or less fits, so you get a good and professional looking result. We had one machine (the people who commisioned it went bankrupt and couldn't pay for it :-() that would take a sheet of plastic, turn it into a correctly sized bag for whatever was in there, cover the thing to be wrapped, then shrink it. It was amazing. )
I know this may not sound that awesome, but they basically built robots for a living. And that is cool.
Eventually, I hope to go into a job like that -- maybe R&D at some manufacturing place, something involving lots of interesting design work followed by actually building the designs in a shop. That would be cool.
				
		
			