Ravenclau
Agricultural
- Aug 10, 2020
- 4
Hello everyone,,
This is my experience as a geotechnical engineer. Will change some once you get your PE. I'm still an EIT.
Typically you will spend allot if time in the field logging bore holes and rock cores. Other field responsibilities are laying out the borings, making sure utilities are cleared, and spending allot of time dealing with all the problems that pop up (broken drill rigs, stuck equipment, pissed off drillers, etc...)
In the office, duties include making boring logs/soil profiles, clearing utilities, scheduling drillers, assigning lab work, interpreting lab results, some light drafting, assisting in writing sections of geo reports, trying your hand at some simpler design calcs.
I also help out in the lab on occasion when things get really busy.
If you enjoy being outside year round, don't mind writing your lab reports, and enjoy your soils lab/Geo classes you should enjoy it..
This is my experience as a geotechnical engineer. Will change some once you get your PE. I'm still an EIT.
Typically you will spend allot if time in the field logging bore holes and rock cores. Other field responsibilities are laying out the borings, making sure utilities are cleared, and spending allot of time dealing with all the problems that pop up (broken drill rigs, stuck equipment, pissed off drillers, etc...)
In the office, duties include making boring logs/soil profiles, clearing utilities, scheduling drillers, assigning lab work, interpreting lab results, some light drafting, assisting in writing sections of geo reports, trying your hand at some simpler design calcs.
I also help out in the lab on occasion when things get really busy.
If you enjoy being outside year round, don't mind writing your lab reports, and enjoy your soils lab/Geo classes you should enjoy it..