How do I gain creative experience in engineering?

In summary: I turned the machine off when I got to the middle of the vise, put the endmill back on the vise and cut the metal free.
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cornucopiasam
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Summary: (undergrad student) What is something I can do this summer to develop my creative instinct in engineering?

Hey everyone!

I am currently an undergrad freshman studying mechanical engineering. I love the courses and I understand the scientific concepts, but I know that engineering is a creative discipline and that I can't become a successful engineer just from things learned in a classroom. What is something I can do on my own time that can help me develop my creative instinct?

I am looking for something along the lines of a personal project or a study program since it's too late to apply for an internship this summer. I have no experience working on personal projects and have no equipment, but I have a little money saved and I could pay for materials (however I'm still a college student with a small bank account). If you're wondering, I chose this field of study because I enjoy math and physics and thought that my aptitudes would be applicable in engineering.

Thank you!
 
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  • #2
Look for a club that interests you on campus, usually lots of interesting projects going on (robotics, race cars, electric cars, human powered submarines etc...). Sometimes they run through summer.
 
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  • #3
Find a maker space and then design and build things. Trust me, by the time you design something and then build it yourself, you will learn an enormous amount about how to design things that can actually be built and how to specify dimensions and other things so that the dimensions that matter end up within tolerances. Ditto for other aspects of ME. Actually conceiving of something and following through by doing everything from start to finish will teach you more than you could ever learn in a classroom setting. There are lots of maker spaces that have the sorts of things you would find in machine shops, electronics shops and computer labs, even if they aren't state of the art. Fees are not much and the only thing you have to supply are materials. Lots of times small amounts of materials can be had inexpensively from placers that recycle scrap metal and other material.
 
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In addition to inquiring about special student projects going on at your university, one of the best routes, as stated above, is to see if there is a "Makerspace" facility if there one in your area. If so, there will be an assembly of people working on projects at that facility that may happy for your involvement, at least until you identify your own project that you want to do. The easy way to find one, or more, in your area is to Google "makerspace near me".
 
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  • #5
Have you taken any CAD drawing courses yet? If you have access to a 3D printer at your school (or through the clubs and Maker resources mentioned above), you can start to draw and print some objects that you can use in your daily life. You can start with hand sketches (3-view and perspective), then draw the plans up with a 3D CAD package (there are student versions and free versions available -- check to see what your school & ME department use), and then print the object out and see how close it is to your original sketches. Pretty fun, and also very applicable to your ME course of study.

What are some things that come to mind that you might like to 3D print for yourself? :smile:

https://www.loc.gov/resource/afc1940001.afc1940001_d28201/
245670
 
  • #6
Let me add on to this from personal experience when I started graduate school to become an experimentalist. My advisors were really big on being able to build and/or fix equipment in the machine shop, since the shop people were not around on weekends and holidays when were often using the beamline. So, first they wanted me to draw something up and send it to the shop to be made. I took my autocaded drawings and turned them over to the shop and when I later came back and asked about the drawings, the head of the shop said, '"Oh, you mean your cartoons?" So, the next time, I talked to people who knew more about how to properly draw and dimension something so that I knew more about what to use for references to ensure the critical dimensions were well defined without specifying everything so tightly that as the said to a colleage, who specified everything to a thousandth of an inch, "Well, we could use a hammer to pound it together."

Next lesson was using a milling machine. The shop supervisor walked me over to a milling machine, put my chunck of metal in a vise, showed me how to put the endmill in and snug it up, turned the machine on and the walked away and said good luck. Fortunately, I am fairly mechanically adept and not afraid to bother people, ask questions and let them make fun of me, so that all worked out and I not only got my pieces machined, but learned even more about how to design something in a way that lent itself to being made as easily as possible. After this I went through a similar process leaning to use a lathe and grind my own lathe tools, which furthered even more my ability to design thing with a conscious effort to do so with a picture of how someone would have to actually use my drawings to make the pieces.

Next was my attempt to learn to silver solder fittings to a one of a kind magnet that had burned up and I had to rewind with copper tubing. As luck would have it, I immediately used the torch to melt two fittings tht I thought would be nearly irreplaceable. After a half a day of having the machinist make fun of me and tell me that had no ide what they were going to do now, they finally just laughed and made a couple of new fittings for me By the time I finished grad school, I was made an honorary machinist and give my own tools.

Let me add that I never took an autocad class, or a class in mechanical drawing and was just lucky that I had spent some time whrn I was younger working on cars, so that I wasn't totally mechanically declined. In the end, the experience of doing these things myself was one of the most valuable things I ever learned and I have been able to make my own experimental apparatus where the cost of buying things and trying to assemble something close to what I wanted was so cost prohibitive that I could never have been able to do it.
I've managed to even design some things that were inherently, but unavoidably dangerous where the lab director overruled the saftey engineer as being excessively paranoid.

If you can find a maker space with some machine tools, and you do everything yourself, your experience making and building your own designs will teach you a great deal about how to design for manufacture by real people using real machine tools. That will lead to getting the things you design finished much faster, easier to service and more likely to be what you really want and work the way you expect. There are many things I could never have done without being able to do them myself simply because of price, the time lag in finding a shop to make the parts and trying to explain to a shop why some things had to be done a ertain way.

Sorry for the lengthy story here, but, back when I was in grad school, getting advice on how best to do things from newly minted MEs or MEs with just a few years experience was more of a hinderence than anything else. They were good a drawing things, telling me to scour the ASME manuals, and the like, but their actual experience translating what they were designing into things that were supposed be used in the lab, often resulted in some quirky designs that were difficult to fabricate and not always as easy to use when attaching them to existing equipment. (Or as the shop guys referred to things, "An engineer's wet dream.")

There really is no better way to integrate everything you've learned and become creative than to get some hands on experience with every step from design to finished assembly. And, I would like to especially emphasize the creative aspect here, because there are many ways to design the same widget, but a great deal of creativity might be required to do so in way that makes it easy to manufacture consistently, inexpensively and service later on. I've seen one person design something such that once assembled, none of the bolts were accessible to disassemble it later. You don't want to live something like that down. :)

As an ME, you have a lot of opportunity to be creative and demonstrate your creativity by thinking through the entire process and not just doing the most obvious, clumsy thing that initially comes to mind, espeially if you choose a career as part of scientific group that needs many one of a kind pieces of apparatus designed and built. There , you have the chance to be an artist.
 
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  • #7
Great post @bobob :smile:
bobob said:
I've seen one person design something such that once assembled, none of the bolts were accessible to disassemble it later.
Yeah, or only accessible in spaces so tight that you almost have to make a custom tool to get to the bolts. o0)
 
  • #8
bobob said:
I've seen one person design something such that once assembled, none of the bolts were accessible to disassemble it later.

Two words. Explosive bolts.
 
  • #9
Vanadium 50 said:
Two words. Explosive bolts.
That didn't work out so well for Gus... :wink:
 
  • #10
Well, even worse was that what the person made which could not be disassembled without a cutting torch was a collimator and faraday cup containing a tritium source that was supposed to be bolted to a vacuum system. Explosive bolts would have drawn some really severe frowns from the health physicists if used as means of opening the unopenable can. (There are somethings that HPs just don't have a sense of humor about :) Everyone just prayed that the wire connected to the BNC never came loose so that the can never needed to be opened and fixed. :)
 

1. How can I gain creative experience in engineering?

One way to gain creative experience in engineering is to participate in design projects or competitions. This will allow you to apply your engineering knowledge and skills in a creative and practical way.

2. Can I gain creative experience through internships?

Yes, internships are a great way to gain creative experience in engineering. They offer hands-on experience and allow you to work on real-world projects under the guidance of experienced engineers.

3. Are there any online resources for gaining creative experience in engineering?

Yes, there are many online resources such as design tutorials, virtual design challenges, and online courses that can help you gain creative experience in engineering.

4. How can I incorporate creativity into my engineering studies?

You can incorporate creativity into your engineering studies by taking elective courses in design or participating in extracurricular activities such as engineering clubs or hackathons.

5. Is it important to have creative experience in engineering?

Yes, having creative experience in engineering is important as it allows you to think outside the box and come up with innovative solutions to complex problems. It also helps you stand out in the job market and can lead to exciting career opportunities.

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