lol dude I don'tSo you don't dance to disco hits all day?
This thread made me look for my Bunny Suit toy that I had. Didn't find it.
lol dude I don'tSo you don't dance to disco hits all day?
This thread made me look for my Bunny Suit toy that I had. Didn't find it.
I'm not yet in school for this degree yet, I live in EU(Slovakia) and the nearest fab is approx 500 miles away which belongs to Infineon Technologies, yet Intel and GloFo(ex AMD) fabs are here too. The nearest Intel fab is like 1550 miles.
There was a fab in my state but it was abandoned long ago.
Oh and, is the yellow light particularly annoying or puts some additional wear on the eyes?
Yes, I do wear dioptric glasses, I can see quite well without them too but I just use them for better comfort etc. Are they not allowed in fabs?No.
But if you dont like it just wear the blue goggles.
Wait, do you have glasses?
Yes, I do wear dioptric glasses, I can see quite well without them too but I just use them for better comfort etc. Are they not allowed in fabs?
Exactly. I'm not saying it's bad by any stretch (pulled north of $100K as a "greenhorn" PhD), but just stagnant.2. Pay ... although the pay scale has been stagnant for a dozen years it's still better than most industries.
I agree with most of your points, except for a couple...I've worked at perhaps 25 different FABs since 1982 and just completed a 2 year stint in Albany NY working at GF and NanoFAB -- I'm currently working at Intel in Chandler AZ.
The pay scale, as has been mentioned, has been flat since the tech bubble burst but is still higher than most industries. Most jobs require either a 2 year science related degree or the experience to equal that but engineering level jobs will not surprisingly require 4 year+ science degrees.
The work and work environment isn't for everyone and there is a good deal of turnover for entry level work. In the FAB itself there is a hierarchy that, beginning at the bottom, is:
1. Operators (they run the equipment)
2. Techs (install and maintain the equipment)
3. Engineers (write recipes and modify the process to improve yield)
There are other jobs for even higher level types but they don't tend to work in the FAB all that much preferring to work in little labs that tend to be less stringent as far as protocol is concerned.
The major negatives are:
1. 12 hour shifts are the norm and many can't make it past about 8 hours.
2. Holidays ... if your scheduled workday falls on a holiday it becomes a regular workday and you have to work -- including Christmas etc.
3. Bunny suits ... if you do any physical or even mental work you will sweat your ass off.
4. Pressure ... with new FABs costing $4B+ it's imperative that all tools be operating at near 100% utilization and there's a lot of pressure to make that happen. There are some process tools, like the new immersion litho tools that cost upwards of $80M each and a big FAB will have dozens of them -- you can bet that anytime one of them goes down everyone up the chain of command will know within 15 minutes.
The major positives:
1. 12 hour shifts ... typically you work a 2 week cycle and you wind up getting lots of weekdays off and that's great for getting things done and being places that would be crowded on the weekends. The average workweek is 42 hours long so there's more pay even if you don't get time-and-a-half for it. You drive to work fewer times/week and often when traffic is less.
2. Pay ... although the pay scale has been stagnant for a dozen years it's still better than most industries.
Hello,
As this is highly specialized forum, there are for sure some people here who work or have worked in semiconductor fab. I would like to do this kinda job once and would be nice to know what education you need for it, I guess probably masters in electrical engineering or computing is needed, what responsibilities you have and what is your personal view of doing it and how you enjoy it.
How are the salaries and possible dangers/risk in this work...etc
You are not required to share anything that is confidential or should not be told I just want to hear opinions and some basic info about it, and how to get into something like this, what education and experience I need and so on.
thnx