Tabaluga
Structural
- Dec 29, 2009
- 27
All the best in the New Year from a new member!
New Year's Day - resolutions, ahh... ;-)... so I thought I'd ask for advise about the following:
I currently work and live in the SW of England where strangely, given the current economic climate, there seem to exist some job openings in the aero industry (EADS, British Aerospace/Rolls Royce) - at least that's the impression I get when looking at, say justengineers.net. That got me thinking, would a move be possible for a post such as that of a fatigue/stress/composites stress engineer or related - but w/o the need of pursuing another degree?
I hold an MEng in Civil with about 9 yrs of varied civil experience - including 3 yrs in bridge design (current post) and analysis - these are fairly straight forward applications/analyses.
The motivation for this came back to me a couple years back when I first moved to this part of the country, met some people in the industry and saw these job adverts. I was originally considering aero when at uni, but due to the timing (end of the Cold War), there was a lot of employment uncertainty for the aero graduate out there - and so in the end I opted for a safer route of civil. The only connection with the aviation industry is my certified training as airframe and power plant technician which I did prior to uni. Could this fact make the potential switch more justifiable in the eyes of the employer (that is the only thing that can make me stand out)?
As for personal constraints: I am in my mid 30s, have a family (with all the obligations that come with it, both financial and time), so getting another degree is probably out of question for me. Also, it is not that I am unhappy or dislike where I currently am professionally, but more the case of unrealised interest/opportunity, which suddenly appears to be within reach... Or is the whole idea just the classic case of the "grass is greener elsewhere..." syndrome.. on a cold, harsh New Year's Day...?!
Has anyone considered a similar move themselves or know of anyone? Is it a lost case or could there be hope? All helpful advice will be much appreciated.
Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.
New Year's Day - resolutions, ahh... ;-)... so I thought I'd ask for advise about the following:
I currently work and live in the SW of England where strangely, given the current economic climate, there seem to exist some job openings in the aero industry (EADS, British Aerospace/Rolls Royce) - at least that's the impression I get when looking at, say justengineers.net. That got me thinking, would a move be possible for a post such as that of a fatigue/stress/composites stress engineer or related - but w/o the need of pursuing another degree?
I hold an MEng in Civil with about 9 yrs of varied civil experience - including 3 yrs in bridge design (current post) and analysis - these are fairly straight forward applications/analyses.
The motivation for this came back to me a couple years back when I first moved to this part of the country, met some people in the industry and saw these job adverts. I was originally considering aero when at uni, but due to the timing (end of the Cold War), there was a lot of employment uncertainty for the aero graduate out there - and so in the end I opted for a safer route of civil. The only connection with the aviation industry is my certified training as airframe and power plant technician which I did prior to uni. Could this fact make the potential switch more justifiable in the eyes of the employer (that is the only thing that can make me stand out)?
As for personal constraints: I am in my mid 30s, have a family (with all the obligations that come with it, both financial and time), so getting another degree is probably out of question for me. Also, it is not that I am unhappy or dislike where I currently am professionally, but more the case of unrealised interest/opportunity, which suddenly appears to be within reach... Or is the whole idea just the classic case of the "grass is greener elsewhere..." syndrome.. on a cold, harsh New Year's Day...?!
Has anyone considered a similar move themselves or know of anyone? Is it a lost case or could there be hope? All helpful advice will be much appreciated.
Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.