Engineering Manufacturing design / process engineer - hands on or sit on yer butt?

AI Thread Summary
Manufacturing Process Engineers (MPEs) typically engage in a more hands-on experience compared to other engineering roles, often involving direct interaction with products and processes. Their work primarily occurs at the end of the manufacturing process, where they troubleshoot issues and refine assembly procedures. MPEs enjoy the opportunity to physically inspect and disassemble products to identify and resolve problems, balancing this with computer-based tasks such as writing processes for assemblers. Job satisfaction among MPEs often stems from their preference for practical work over prolonged computer use. The work environment can vary significantly depending on the company, with low-volume, hand-assembled products offering a different experience than high-volume assembly lines like those at Boeing.
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Manufacturing design / process engineer -- hands on or sit on yer butt?

I've heard that manufacturing process design engineers (not sure if that's exactly the right title, basically designing the things you see on "how its made") have much more "hands on" experiences than other engineering roles.

I'm casting about here to see if anyone has experience in this particular field, or if you know someone that has, and if so, do they actually enjoy a higher degree of hands-on work compared to, say, other engineering disciplines that are more "keyboard and mouse" oriented?


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I work with a lot of MPE's at my job. We're typically at the tail-end of the building process of any part. It's already been designed, and most of the kinks should already be out (although, often times there are still many to iron out). Assemblers who build the product are expected to make them to a certain quality, and when a part fails or is incorrectly built it is up to us to see where it failed and how to fix it. We write the processes in our computer to tell the assemblers how to fix the problem. It allows more opportunity to get up, walk around, take apart products and get a good look inside to see where the problem lies.

I know a few people who love their job as Manufacturing Process Engineers because they don't like to just stare at a screen all day. It depends on what you like doing the most. I don't mind staring at a computer, but I don't mind looking inside jobs and finding out what makes them tick, either. We do spend a lot of time on the computer writing processes, however. If you like seeing a product, being able to tear it down and figure out how to make them better, you'd like being an MPE.

Note: I work for a company that doesn't have an assembly line. They provide mostly low-volume products that are assembled by hand. The atmosphere for an MPE at Boeing would be drastically different, I imagine.
 
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