Ric wrote:
scrambler73 wrote:
As with all; there are good doctors and bad doctors, good plumbers and bad plumbers, good lawyers and bad ones, good technicians and bad technicians; so too there are good Engineers and bad ones.
this is the correct answer....and the thrust of my initial comment.
In my personal experience (and I do occassionaly deal with structural engineering (and structural engineers) in my profession), a "formal education", regardless of how "grueling", and the piece of paper that goes along with it has NOTHING to do with an individuals design and build aptitude. Nor does it compensate for common sense.
Some people are more naturally gifted than others, and seldom have to look in a book. Others have to work their tuckus' off to barely get by.
"Mechanical Engineering" as an institution is quite likely my favorite as I've been intrigued by how things function since a very young age. For my 5th birthday, I received my first new bicycle, and the following day took it completely apart...And I mean down to the bearings in the cranks and headstock. Dad was thrilled.
If I had it to do all over again, I would more than likely have pointed my lifes career ship in that direction.
But since I've made it this far, I'll just be content in "re-engineering" things that I feel were designed by those that barely got by... Regardless of their so-called "title".
So please know Rick that I am not poking a stick at Engineering and Engineers as a profession, but was trying to make the point that although a piece of paper (formal education) definitely will get your foot in the door and widens opportunities on the front end of ones' career, it does NOT make one a competent engineer. (or Doctor, or Lawyer, or Butcher, or Baker, or Candlestick Maker)..... EXPERIENCE coupled together with CREATIVE GIFTS do. And one does not get either of those things sitting in a desk surrounded by hung-over 20 year-olds.