Triumph
Lifer
- Oct 9, 1999
- 15,031
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As someone who has a BSME and comes from a family of ME's, I would strongly discourage a young person from pursuing this career. It's a dying field, from both a theory and applications standpoint. While there will always been a need for ME's, more and more of the world is solid state.
Because what, ME's are still making vacuum tube operated devices?
ME is a much broader field than EE, you can branch out into anything with a masters degree after an ME BS. The guy who said EE's can pick up ME stuff before ME's can pick up EE stuff is retarded. He's probably thinking about the time an EE stuck his circuit board onto a Lego car with a stepper motor and made the wheels move. I've seen the mechanical things that EE's design, riddled with errors, mistakes, bad choices, and just straight up crap that defies common sense.
ME areas that aren't going anywhere anytime soon:
- Energy research/power generation
- HVAC
- Structural/mechanical analysis
- Fluid dynamics
- Biomechanics
- Transportation systems (cars or the eventual successor)
- Thermodynamics
- Nanotechnology
It really doesn't matter, it comes down to what you like doing. If you like machinery, things that move, cars, trucks, motorcycles, airplanes, boats, are interested in knowing how things work, always take things apart etc. you'll tend towards ME. If you like computers, electronics, programming, etc. you'll gravitate towards EE. I for one have no interest in sitting behind a desk and programming all day, I like working with heavy equipment, so for me ME is the correct choice.
If you like all of those things and would be happier with either, then you can combine them with electro-mechanical controls, or choose one or the other based on other criteria.