familyman731
Mechanical
- Apr 9, 2019
- 7
Since I graduated college with my ME (about 3.5 years ago) I have been working in manufacturing as a production engineer. The deeper I get into it, the more it seems long, inconsistent hours are a core part of this field. Most projects can't really move past the planning/quoting/etc phase except outside of production hours, but simultaneously, you are required to be available to support production during the day (and possibly night if working at a 3 shift operation). On top of that, if a major piece of equipment goes down and maintenance can't figure out what is wrong, you are stuck troubleshooting it until it is back up and running, regardless of how late that ends up being.
My primary goal entering engineering was to enter a career where I could make enough money to support my family, but to also be able to be there for my family. As long as they are taken care of, I would rather have more time with them than fatten my paycheck a little more.
I know not all engineers face this problem, though it does not seem to be uncommon even outside of PE. Can anyone point me in the direction of a good career path I can start on as an ME that has little to no overtime requirements (preferably 5 hrs/week or less)? Obviously, I'd rather not have to start from square one, but at this point, I'd be willing to have to take a few steps back to get my career going in the right direction.
My primary goal entering engineering was to enter a career where I could make enough money to support my family, but to also be able to be there for my family. As long as they are taken care of, I would rather have more time with them than fatten my paycheck a little more.
I know not all engineers face this problem, though it does not seem to be uncommon even outside of PE. Can anyone point me in the direction of a good career path I can start on as an ME that has little to no overtime requirements (preferably 5 hrs/week or less)? Obviously, I'd rather not have to start from square one, but at this point, I'd be willing to have to take a few steps back to get my career going in the right direction.