romulus2009
Mechanical
- May 27, 2009
- 19
The thread title says it all really,
But let me expand on what I mean just for a second.
Going from a highly specialized graduate level degree in engineering to an EPC company in the Oil and Gas industry, I get the very distinct feeling that the work I do right now is a sort of superficial or "fake" engineering. Although my work is referred to as "engineering", I feel that it comprises mostly about knowing things rather than DOING things. In this business it seems all that you have to do is know everything there is to know about whatever equipment you are responsible for. Why? Because the OEMs /Vendors are the ones doing all the "real" engineering utilizing all the CFD, FEA, CAD, non-linear partial differential equations solving tools while at an EPC level it seems that NPSHA = Hsurface + Hstatic - Hloss - Hvap is as complicated as it gets.
Also, I feel that because of this, an engineer doing hard core engineering in an OEM has an advantage, and is able to move to an EPC and actually be a real asset, while the only real benefit an EPC guy can be to an OEM if they went the other way would be mostly in management more than engineering.
Am I the only one that has this feeling? Do you get OEM jobs that are a lot less technical as well?
The main advantage I see of EPC engineering jobs is that you get decent variety in the type of activities, you obtain a wider breath of knowledge and you obtain good management and interpersonal skills all the cost of forgetting your engineering basics and fundamentals and not ever truly getting that real understanding of engineering concepts that comes only when you dig into the hard core theory.
It's a lot more practical knowledge vs true/detailed understanding.
Curious to know your thoughts on this.
Romulus
But let me expand on what I mean just for a second.
Going from a highly specialized graduate level degree in engineering to an EPC company in the Oil and Gas industry, I get the very distinct feeling that the work I do right now is a sort of superficial or "fake" engineering. Although my work is referred to as "engineering", I feel that it comprises mostly about knowing things rather than DOING things. In this business it seems all that you have to do is know everything there is to know about whatever equipment you are responsible for. Why? Because the OEMs /Vendors are the ones doing all the "real" engineering utilizing all the CFD, FEA, CAD, non-linear partial differential equations solving tools while at an EPC level it seems that NPSHA = Hsurface + Hstatic - Hloss - Hvap is as complicated as it gets.
Also, I feel that because of this, an engineer doing hard core engineering in an OEM has an advantage, and is able to move to an EPC and actually be a real asset, while the only real benefit an EPC guy can be to an OEM if they went the other way would be mostly in management more than engineering.
Am I the only one that has this feeling? Do you get OEM jobs that are a lot less technical as well?
The main advantage I see of EPC engineering jobs is that you get decent variety in the type of activities, you obtain a wider breath of knowledge and you obtain good management and interpersonal skills all the cost of forgetting your engineering basics and fundamentals and not ever truly getting that real understanding of engineering concepts that comes only when you dig into the hard core theory.
It's a lot more practical knowledge vs true/detailed understanding.
Curious to know your thoughts on this.
Romulus