- This topic has 75 replies, 10 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 7 months ago by patb.
-
AuthorPosts
-
May 23, 2010 at 9:47 AM #553057May 23, 2010 at 9:51 AM #553656garysearsParticipant
Based on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
May 23, 2010 at 9:51 AM #553168garysearsParticipantBased on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
May 23, 2010 at 9:51 AM #553755garysearsParticipantBased on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
May 23, 2010 at 9:51 AM #553062garysearsParticipantBased on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
May 23, 2010 at 9:51 AM #554030garysearsParticipantBased on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
May 23, 2010 at 10:24 AM #553661jficquetteParticipant[quote=garysears]Based on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
http://www.asma.org/aboutasma/careers.php%5B/quote%5D
Great Idea.
Thanks,
John
PS If anyone has a contact he could call let me know!
May 23, 2010 at 10:24 AM #553173jficquetteParticipant[quote=garysears]Based on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
http://www.asma.org/aboutasma/careers.php%5B/quote%5D
Great Idea.
Thanks,
John
PS If anyone has a contact he could call let me know!
May 23, 2010 at 10:24 AM #553067jficquetteParticipant[quote=garysears]Based on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
http://www.asma.org/aboutasma/careers.php%5B/quote%5D
Great Idea.
Thanks,
John
PS If anyone has a contact he could call let me know!
May 23, 2010 at 10:24 AM #554035jficquetteParticipant[quote=garysears]Based on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
http://www.asma.org/aboutasma/careers.php%5B/quote%5D
Great Idea.
Thanks,
John
PS If anyone has a contact he could call let me know!
May 23, 2010 at 10:24 AM #553759jficquetteParticipant[quote=garysears]Based on his background and interest, maybe he could also consider Aerospace Medicine if he wants to pursue a little more education.
http://www.asma.org/aboutasma/careers.php%5B/quote%5D
Great Idea.
Thanks,
John
PS If anyone has a contact he could call let me know!
May 23, 2010 at 11:03 AM #554040jficquetteParticipant[quote=Waiting to feel the magic]I’m not super familiar with this industry. I did work for NASA for a few years in the 80’s. A couple of places to try:
– Morton Thiocol (of the Space Shuttle O-Ring fame). They are located outside of Salt Lake City, a few miles from the middle of no where.
– Boeing. In Seattle. They do both commerical and military aviation. In this particular company I’d say do your research. There are a lot of people there who wanted to design airplanes who are actually responsible for very minute, specialized, parts of the aircraft and never do anything else. The engineers are also union.
– Aerojet. In Sacramento, CA. They’re really a chemical company, but they designed the rocket fuels for many missiles.
– Lockheed. Don’t know where they’re located, particularly the division that does aircraft. I think they’re the lead company on the Joint Strike Fighter and Boeing is assisting. There was a great Nova (the PBS program) on the competition between Boeing and Lockheed for the design of the Joint Strike Fighter.
Defense jobs can be very cyclical depending on the contracts, gov’t spending, etc. OTHO, they probably won’t be outsourcing them to China anytime soon. In general, it’s really a bad time to be an engineer.
Hope that helps.[/quote]
It does help. As a matter of fact the cyclical nature of the industry and the rapid advances it is seeing is another reason I suggested the Air Force.
I was thinking he could go into the Air Force or Navy, spend 10 years, make contacts and then move into industry if he wanted.
Thanks,
John
May 23, 2010 at 11:03 AM #553072jficquetteParticipant[quote=Waiting to feel the magic]I’m not super familiar with this industry. I did work for NASA for a few years in the 80’s. A couple of places to try:
– Morton Thiocol (of the Space Shuttle O-Ring fame). They are located outside of Salt Lake City, a few miles from the middle of no where.
– Boeing. In Seattle. They do both commerical and military aviation. In this particular company I’d say do your research. There are a lot of people there who wanted to design airplanes who are actually responsible for very minute, specialized, parts of the aircraft and never do anything else. The engineers are also union.
– Aerojet. In Sacramento, CA. They’re really a chemical company, but they designed the rocket fuels for many missiles.
– Lockheed. Don’t know where they’re located, particularly the division that does aircraft. I think they’re the lead company on the Joint Strike Fighter and Boeing is assisting. There was a great Nova (the PBS program) on the competition between Boeing and Lockheed for the design of the Joint Strike Fighter.
Defense jobs can be very cyclical depending on the contracts, gov’t spending, etc. OTHO, they probably won’t be outsourcing them to China anytime soon. In general, it’s really a bad time to be an engineer.
Hope that helps.[/quote]
It does help. As a matter of fact the cyclical nature of the industry and the rapid advances it is seeing is another reason I suggested the Air Force.
I was thinking he could go into the Air Force or Navy, spend 10 years, make contacts and then move into industry if he wanted.
Thanks,
John
May 23, 2010 at 11:03 AM #553764jficquetteParticipant[quote=Waiting to feel the magic]I’m not super familiar with this industry. I did work for NASA for a few years in the 80’s. A couple of places to try:
– Morton Thiocol (of the Space Shuttle O-Ring fame). They are located outside of Salt Lake City, a few miles from the middle of no where.
– Boeing. In Seattle. They do both commerical and military aviation. In this particular company I’d say do your research. There are a lot of people there who wanted to design airplanes who are actually responsible for very minute, specialized, parts of the aircraft and never do anything else. The engineers are also union.
– Aerojet. In Sacramento, CA. They’re really a chemical company, but they designed the rocket fuels for many missiles.
– Lockheed. Don’t know where they’re located, particularly the division that does aircraft. I think they’re the lead company on the Joint Strike Fighter and Boeing is assisting. There was a great Nova (the PBS program) on the competition between Boeing and Lockheed for the design of the Joint Strike Fighter.
Defense jobs can be very cyclical depending on the contracts, gov’t spending, etc. OTHO, they probably won’t be outsourcing them to China anytime soon. In general, it’s really a bad time to be an engineer.
Hope that helps.[/quote]
It does help. As a matter of fact the cyclical nature of the industry and the rapid advances it is seeing is another reason I suggested the Air Force.
I was thinking he could go into the Air Force or Navy, spend 10 years, make contacts and then move into industry if he wanted.
Thanks,
John
May 23, 2010 at 11:03 AM #553666jficquetteParticipant[quote=Waiting to feel the magic]I’m not super familiar with this industry. I did work for NASA for a few years in the 80’s. A couple of places to try:
– Morton Thiocol (of the Space Shuttle O-Ring fame). They are located outside of Salt Lake City, a few miles from the middle of no where.
– Boeing. In Seattle. They do both commerical and military aviation. In this particular company I’d say do your research. There are a lot of people there who wanted to design airplanes who are actually responsible for very minute, specialized, parts of the aircraft and never do anything else. The engineers are also union.
– Aerojet. In Sacramento, CA. They’re really a chemical company, but they designed the rocket fuels for many missiles.
– Lockheed. Don’t know where they’re located, particularly the division that does aircraft. I think they’re the lead company on the Joint Strike Fighter and Boeing is assisting. There was a great Nova (the PBS program) on the competition between Boeing and Lockheed for the design of the Joint Strike Fighter.
Defense jobs can be very cyclical depending on the contracts, gov’t spending, etc. OTHO, they probably won’t be outsourcing them to China anytime soon. In general, it’s really a bad time to be an engineer.
Hope that helps.[/quote]
It does help. As a matter of fact the cyclical nature of the industry and the rapid advances it is seeing is another reason I suggested the Air Force.
I was thinking he could go into the Air Force or Navy, spend 10 years, make contacts and then move into industry if he wanted.
Thanks,
John
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.