I just recently finished a Drafting and Design technical program at my local cc, and I have been planning to go into civil/environmental engineering for some time now. In the past few months, however, I have been introduced to the world of Botany through a biologist friend of mine. I'm curious...
Supposed to be A curious combo^ sorry
Hello, I was just wondering what kind of prospects one might seek with a Environmental Biology and Mechanical engineering double major. I'm currently studying meche, but I love ecology and just typically being in nature. I've also considered this and...
How hard would it be to pull the sound card out of an old NES game system and build a 8 or 16 step sequencer for it. Building the sequencer would be no prob, but I'm just curious as to how complicated that NES sound card is. I have a couple of NESs at my parents house, but I don't want to make...
How common is it for engineers to change industries? Like, say your a mechanical design engineer and you've worked in the oil&gas industry for 8 years, and you want to start working as a robotics design engineer...or something more practical, but just a different industry.
Hahaha there are actually a lot of jobs available for it here in New Orleans. But the requirements for all of them say BS in Biomed Eng or relevant degree. I'm just curious if a degree in MechE is "relevant" enough for something like that, along with some personal learning of the field?
Hmm...what do you mean by this. I feel like it encapsulates all of my interests as far as engineering/science goes: RF, magnetism, particle physics, quantum mechanics, machine design. Although, I am pretty green on the matter honestly. I've just always been fascinated with the LHC and particle...
So I'm curious about what kind of jobs a MechE would have at a particle accelerator? I'm planning on Double majoring in Meche And Physics in undergrad, and have hopes of getting Masters in MechE Machine Design and ElecE Power Systems. Any advice on the matter is much appreciated.
Well, one of my main goals is to become an accelerator engineer more or less. I plan on studying MechE in machine design and EE in power systems in grad. Potential money isn't quite a large concern to me. After all I didn't seek to get into engineering for the money haha.
What sort of benefits are there to studying both mechanical engineering and physics in undergrad. I'm pretty dead set on this, I'm just curious to know. Has anyone else gone this route? I'm also minoring in EE if that helps the scenario out.