Pulpboy
Mechanical
- Aug 19, 2002
- 66
I started this thread in the wrong place and I think they deleted it.
I have been out of school for several years and I work at a great company. I've been doing project management for the most part. I'm in charge of most small and large projects in my area. I look at varous designs, compare bids, scope out work with some minor calculating, get budgets etc. The company is set up with a lot of standard engineering documents. I.e, What type of materials for what type of processes, detailed drawings of access doors etc. I modify them slightly to produce what I want.
My question is should I be doing something else to become a good engineer. Personally I like what I do, I don't like doing a lot of boring, intense calculations but I'm scared I'm not getting enough designing and calculating experience to become a good engineer. In the end I use a lot of vendors for information... they can calculate it out in mere minutes because they specialise in it versus me that would take hours to do the calculations.
I have been out of school for several years and I work at a great company. I've been doing project management for the most part. I'm in charge of most small and large projects in my area. I look at varous designs, compare bids, scope out work with some minor calculating, get budgets etc. The company is set up with a lot of standard engineering documents. I.e, What type of materials for what type of processes, detailed drawings of access doors etc. I modify them slightly to produce what I want.
My question is should I be doing something else to become a good engineer. Personally I like what I do, I don't like doing a lot of boring, intense calculations but I'm scared I'm not getting enough designing and calculating experience to become a good engineer. In the end I use a lot of vendors for information... they can calculate it out in mere minutes because they specialise in it versus me that would take hours to do the calculations.