Andres117
New member
- Jan 19, 2012
- 3
Hi everyone, I'm an Aeronautical Engineer who finished College on July/2014 and I'm looking forward for some feedback on Engineers working in the Aerospace Industry.
Right now I'm working in the Maintenance Planning department in one of the major airlines in my country, the same airline I made my industrial internships; the people I work with are amazing and the enviroment is really cool but I just don't like it.
I feel I'm not really working with "Engineering", here in my country there is only one path for Aeronautical Engineers being it "Maintenance" so we only work in airlines or some small Aicraft Maintenance Organizations (AMOs) and sadly the "Maintenance" industry is really weak. 80% of the airlines here works ONLY with old aircrafts (DC-9, MD-80) so they just buy parts and such from aicraft boneyards and a lot of times it's easier to buy a "new" one than to repair a damaged one.
I work for the only airline who has more recent aicraft (CRJ-700, ERJ-190, etc..) but I still don't feel I'm doing something I like...
I want to work with composite materials, designing parts, structures, testing materials, maintenance of structures, etc.. and that's something I'll only be able to do outside of my country and I'm really scared my CV is not strong enough to even be considerated for any job/postgraduate in this branch...
What would a good company consider important in a recently graduated engineer in the aerospace sector?
Even tough in my current work these skills are not needed I've taken care since college to have some level of proficiency in CAD Software (Solidworks/CATIA really new to CATIA tough), maths software (MATLAB), FEM software (PATRAN/NASTRAN well I'm kind rusty here).
I also take any online courses I can find on the web in stuff I find cool, like "Mechanical Behavior of Materials MITx - 3.032x" or "Composite Materials Overview for Engineers UWashingtonX - AA432x" in platforms like Edx... Stuff like that.
But whenever I look for job profiles I see stuff like "5 years of experience in advanced structural analysis" and I'm like "ohh, well gg"..
I would really appreciate any answer i could get about this topic, from anyone...
Thanks in advance
Andrés
Right now I'm working in the Maintenance Planning department in one of the major airlines in my country, the same airline I made my industrial internships; the people I work with are amazing and the enviroment is really cool but I just don't like it.
I feel I'm not really working with "Engineering", here in my country there is only one path for Aeronautical Engineers being it "Maintenance" so we only work in airlines or some small Aicraft Maintenance Organizations (AMOs) and sadly the "Maintenance" industry is really weak. 80% of the airlines here works ONLY with old aircrafts (DC-9, MD-80) so they just buy parts and such from aicraft boneyards and a lot of times it's easier to buy a "new" one than to repair a damaged one.
I work for the only airline who has more recent aicraft (CRJ-700, ERJ-190, etc..) but I still don't feel I'm doing something I like...
I want to work with composite materials, designing parts, structures, testing materials, maintenance of structures, etc.. and that's something I'll only be able to do outside of my country and I'm really scared my CV is not strong enough to even be considerated for any job/postgraduate in this branch...
What would a good company consider important in a recently graduated engineer in the aerospace sector?
Even tough in my current work these skills are not needed I've taken care since college to have some level of proficiency in CAD Software (Solidworks/CATIA really new to CATIA tough), maths software (MATLAB), FEM software (PATRAN/NASTRAN well I'm kind rusty here).
I also take any online courses I can find on the web in stuff I find cool, like "Mechanical Behavior of Materials MITx - 3.032x" or "Composite Materials Overview for Engineers UWashingtonX - AA432x" in platforms like Edx... Stuff like that.
But whenever I look for job profiles I see stuff like "5 years of experience in advanced structural analysis" and I'm like "ohh, well gg"..
I would really appreciate any answer i could get about this topic, from anyone...
Thanks in advance
Andrés