Yook
Materials
- Jun 23, 2017
- 9
Howdy everyone. I've come here every once in a while for advice, usually when I'm about fed up with my current job, and I truly have appreciated the advice you have lent each time.
I left my last job because I was a lone wolf materials engineer doing failure analysis and felt like there was not a good avenue to self teach to the level I thought necessary in order to give confident engineering opinion on critical designs.
I now find myself in a similar situation, where I am the most experienced person on my very small team, and I don't see much path forward in a technical sense. My job consists of reviewing others' designs and providing materials selection, coating, corrosion protection, etc. advice. Even when I feel like I have absorbed much of the information available to solve a specific problem, it seems like my final answer is very hand wavey and intuitive rather than quantitative. I don't feel very confident because it's very difficult to determine if my approaches to problems are valid or just me spit balling and then rationalizing. I've put in a good chunk of time into this discipline and it's quite disheartening to find myself in this position where I am quite aware of how much knowledge I lack, yet don't see a useful means of learning or anyone even excelling in this field. All the while, my managers tell me I'm "doing a great job, keep it up," when nobody even checks my work. This has led me to question this discipline in general and I'm hoping you can set me straight.
A MSE curriculum teaches you 30 different concepts and then never puts them together into a coherent skillset like mechanical, civil, chemical, electrical, etc. engineers. I can see why this discipline is useful if I wanted to spend my life in academia, but I feel like I was suckered into this degree which has no real world applications. 99% of what I do is help others with topics from the same intro materials class every engineering major has to take. It makes me feel like this discipline should be offered as a minor and not a major.
What even is a materials engineer? I've been doing this for 3 years and still have no clue what it "means" to be a materials engineer. Nobody from my graduating class that I have spoken with is fulfilled in their job or feels competent at much of anything. Every materials engineering position I've seen is either a glorified lab technician or someone who sits and waits for obscure questions from designers which I have next to no idea how to answer. I feel like I'm always just scrambling like mad to find a reference which helps me. I really hope that is not what you all consider engineering. I don't feel like I'm gaining competence or building transferable skills. The teams for MSE are so small and everyone seems to be a generalist.
Where are the competent materials engineers(outside of this forum) and why aren't they transferring their knowledge downwards? ASM handbooks are cumbersome to teach oneself with and haven't changed in years. They are hardly ever enough to actually help solve an issue and really just build background knowledge. ASTM and SAE standards are no use in actually understanding the state of any given industry. Vendors are oftentimes the most competent materials engineers I speak with. I see the knowledge gaps in the materials selection abilities of the mechanical, fluids, and electrical engineers around me but I have no clue where to find the answers to help them design better.
Why should I stick with Materials Engineering? I'm on the edge of leaving this discipline behind and trying to find something else to do with my life.
Sorry if this seems whiny, I've truly given this my all and I want to hear if you guys have had differing experiences and I should give this one more shot at a different job.
I left my last job because I was a lone wolf materials engineer doing failure analysis and felt like there was not a good avenue to self teach to the level I thought necessary in order to give confident engineering opinion on critical designs.
I now find myself in a similar situation, where I am the most experienced person on my very small team, and I don't see much path forward in a technical sense. My job consists of reviewing others' designs and providing materials selection, coating, corrosion protection, etc. advice. Even when I feel like I have absorbed much of the information available to solve a specific problem, it seems like my final answer is very hand wavey and intuitive rather than quantitative. I don't feel very confident because it's very difficult to determine if my approaches to problems are valid or just me spit balling and then rationalizing. I've put in a good chunk of time into this discipline and it's quite disheartening to find myself in this position where I am quite aware of how much knowledge I lack, yet don't see a useful means of learning or anyone even excelling in this field. All the while, my managers tell me I'm "doing a great job, keep it up," when nobody even checks my work. This has led me to question this discipline in general and I'm hoping you can set me straight.
A MSE curriculum teaches you 30 different concepts and then never puts them together into a coherent skillset like mechanical, civil, chemical, electrical, etc. engineers. I can see why this discipline is useful if I wanted to spend my life in academia, but I feel like I was suckered into this degree which has no real world applications. 99% of what I do is help others with topics from the same intro materials class every engineering major has to take. It makes me feel like this discipline should be offered as a minor and not a major.
What even is a materials engineer? I've been doing this for 3 years and still have no clue what it "means" to be a materials engineer. Nobody from my graduating class that I have spoken with is fulfilled in their job or feels competent at much of anything. Every materials engineering position I've seen is either a glorified lab technician or someone who sits and waits for obscure questions from designers which I have next to no idea how to answer. I feel like I'm always just scrambling like mad to find a reference which helps me. I really hope that is not what you all consider engineering. I don't feel like I'm gaining competence or building transferable skills. The teams for MSE are so small and everyone seems to be a generalist.
Where are the competent materials engineers(outside of this forum) and why aren't they transferring their knowledge downwards? ASM handbooks are cumbersome to teach oneself with and haven't changed in years. They are hardly ever enough to actually help solve an issue and really just build background knowledge. ASTM and SAE standards are no use in actually understanding the state of any given industry. Vendors are oftentimes the most competent materials engineers I speak with. I see the knowledge gaps in the materials selection abilities of the mechanical, fluids, and electrical engineers around me but I have no clue where to find the answers to help them design better.
Why should I stick with Materials Engineering? I'm on the edge of leaving this discipline behind and trying to find something else to do with my life.
Sorry if this seems whiny, I've truly given this my all and I want to hear if you guys have had differing experiences and I should give this one more shot at a different job.