Originally posted by: Dedpuhl
Originally posted by: TechnoKid
But, it also depends on what type of engineer you want to be, civil (about the easiest), mechanical, electrical, chemical (about the hardest imo, but chemists make a lot of money), bio-engineer....
It pisses me off when people call CE the "easiest" of the major disciplines. I knew some dumbasses that easily graduated in ChE and I knew very gifted students that had a hard time getting through CE. It depends on what path you take.
CE is very broad. It covers Environmental issues, Geotechnical Design (a.k.a. dirtwork), Materials Modeling, Transportation, Structural Design, Surveying and Water Resources. Some areas are easier than others.
I'm sure I could find an "easy" path through any of the main discipline groups.
Engineers can do everything, but women.....
Originally posted by: Triumph
Oh, and as far as school goes; Yes you take a lot of math and science courses. But really the underlying skill that you are developing is problem solving.
Originally posted by: Triumph
Engineers do everything. Really. But for a very broad definition, think of the show Modern Marvels on History channel. Engineers basically created everything you see on there. Civil engineers built the Autobahn, mechanical engineers design the giant earth movers, material science engineers make the kevlar, electrical/computer engineers make all the electronics, aerospace engineers make the submarines and F-22's, etc. There are engineers that handle every aspect of a product, well beyond just designing it on a computer. When a "thing" is being developed, there are engineers who handle the testing, manufacturing, logistics, safety, reliability, documentation, finances, quality control, and program management of that "thing." In most cases, it doesn't really even matter what that "thing" is, because the tools and knowledge needed to develop it are somewhat generic. It's this knowledge that they teach you in school.
Oh, and as far as school goes; Yes you take a lot of math and science courses. But really the underlying skill that you are developing is problem solving.
I guess what I am getting at is if you are going into Engineering do it because you love it. Eventually you will have to make a living doing something every day. You will have a better life if you enjoy it.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
I guess what I am getting at is if you are going into Engineering do it because you love it. Eventually you will have to make a living doing something every day. You will have a better life if you enjoy it.
I guess that's why I need more research. Maybe it's not designing things that I'm after....though I am sort of designing a voltage booster to power a large array of LED's right now, along with a power regulator for that, but I'm really just adapting the manufacturer's spec sheets for the power booster chip, and other people's schematics, to suit my own needs. I am good at fixing things. Anything - if there's a problem with something, I like to figure out a solution, implement it, and make sure that it works.
Like today - worked on someone's computer. Spyware, and they wanted a hard drive upgrade. They were very happy with the service and the fact that their computer was working better than it was before. They'd already had someone else working on it too, but they'd apparently messed a few other things up. So I was called in. As Homer once said of his new toaster/time machine, but applicable here, "There, better than new." That's what I like - fixing a problem until the customer is happy with, and appreciative of, the result.
And it would appear then, as I scroll down farther in the thread, Triumph addresses this exact thing: Problems, and the solving thereof.