I am also a materials engineer, currently doing a job in Materials Analysis Center. Love to see casting and testing. One day I will be doing the same. (From Pakistan)
Great job Waupaca and Hilary!!!! I like how you covered not only the activities in the job, but your interests and opportunities, also nice background music.
Today my brother took admission for metallurgy engineering field.. I'm kinda scared he might burn or harm himself with all that heat.. Otherwise everything is OK..
I completed my metallurgical engineering degree 3 years back, an still i am unemployed. May be becauseIndia is not doing that great in steel sector. Do help me people to get me a job. 🙏
Виталий Аверьянов So many engineer and chairman and workers in russian manufacturing factory are average age 55 years old to 65 years old even 70 years old. There is no retirement concept.
Young engineer age 30 years old to 35 years old was just only internship employee training. For young engineer 20 years old to 30 years old have guidelines of chairman engineer leadership age 45 years old to 55 years old even 60 years old.
She was internship employee training. For young engineer internship employee training have guidelines of chairman engineer groups and upper leadership groups
Hard to believe iron foundries are still operating in North America in the 21st century. Metallurgical engineering is considered a derelict, obsolete field of study precisely because industries like foundries and steel making have been in steep decline since the 1980s and there hasn't been a recovery to prior levels of employment. Students interested in a scientific and technological career would be better advised to pursue robotics, artificial intelligence, cryogenics and advanced materials for orthotics and prosthetics, etc. Don't follow the industry of the past, look to the future.
@weirjf2 Great response, unless we develop or find some crazy new material/element and it is viable enough to mass produce it. Metals and metallurgy aren't going anywhere.
It's funny you mention robots because I guarantee at least 1 part on them are made of cast iron, probably multiple parts. You are surrounded by cast iron and you have no clue it's there. Metal casting is a cost effective way to mass produce parts, that is not the industry of the past.
Hi Dave. What materials will robots , cryo equipment, and prosthetics be made from in the future? Not to mention aerospace components. Do you think planes will be using composite landing gear and structural components? All metals, ferrous and non-ferrous have been critical for thousands of years and will continue to be. Your comment should be considered ignorant.
@@villain383 If so then why have almost all university metallurgical engineering departments vanished over the past 30 years? That is a fact, not my opinion. Materials Science & Engineering departments have replaced many of them. Metallurgical is just not what it was 40 or 50 years ago.
@@davidcarter5813 The metallurgy departments have vanished mainly because of a lack of students interested in studying metals and that includes mining engineering too , the fact that they changed it to materials engineering is a way to make seem more appealing, the need for metals is greater than ever before with this materialistic system mainly in the US , to call it obsolete when the phone you are holding in your hand has different metals that was obtained by extractive metallurgy really tells you aren’t that bright
I am also a materials engineer, currently doing a job in Materials Analysis Center. Love to see casting and testing. One day I will be doing the same. (From Pakistan)
Great job Waupaca and Hilary!!!! I like how you covered not only the activities in the job, but your interests and opportunities, also nice background music.
Yeah she did really good
How to apply for this job I have experience 8year
Today my brother took admission for metallurgy engineering field.. I'm kinda scared he might burn or harm himself with all that heat.. Otherwise everything is OK..
Hi I'm from Philippines, can apply foundry worker of this company. Thank you. ❤️❤️❤️
Hey could you try this software? Look up circuit solver on the playstore!
The real fun is in R&D projects with the gov.
an artificer in all things brass and iron.
I never saw one on the floor. Wafer gets sent by vacuum tube like at a bank drive up
I completed my metallurgical engineering degree 3 years back, an still i am unemployed. May be becauseIndia is not doing that great in steel sector. Do help me people to get me a job. 🙏
She is cool.
Hello from Russia!👍
Hello from United States. She was just only internship employee.
Виталий Аверьянов So many engineer and chairman and workers in russian manufacturing factory are average age 55 years old to 65 years old even 70 years old. There is no retirement concept.
Виталий Аверьянов She was just only computer operator. Maybe she was internship employee. Her age 30 years old.
Young engineer age 30 years old to 35 years old was just only internship employee training. For young engineer 20 years old to 30 years old have guidelines of chairman engineer leadership age 45 years old to 55 years old even 60 years old.
@@howardlitson9796 Gute Herstellungserfahrung!
hi guys teach us
Yo u are so cool
May I comment that she looks kinda pretty ☺
Hallow mam., I am a metallurgy student... I want to help you ...as assistant.. can you please take my life..... plzzz mam say something
Hahahahah
She was internship employee training. For young engineer internship employee training have guidelines of chairman engineer groups and upper leadership groups
Hard to believe iron foundries are still operating in North America in the 21st century. Metallurgical engineering is considered a derelict, obsolete field of study precisely because industries like foundries and steel making have been in steep decline since the 1980s and there hasn't been a recovery to prior levels of employment. Students interested in a scientific and technological career would be better advised to pursue robotics, artificial intelligence, cryogenics and advanced materials for orthotics and prosthetics, etc. Don't follow the industry of the past, look to the future.
@weirjf2 Great response, unless we develop or find some crazy new material/element and it is viable enough to mass produce it. Metals and metallurgy aren't going anywhere.
It's funny you mention robots because I guarantee at least 1 part on them are made of cast iron, probably multiple parts. You are surrounded by cast iron and you have no clue it's there. Metal casting is a cost effective way to mass produce parts, that is not the industry of the past.
Hi Dave. What materials will robots , cryo equipment, and prosthetics be made from in the future? Not to mention aerospace components. Do you think planes will be using composite landing gear and structural components? All metals, ferrous and non-ferrous have been critical for thousands of years and will continue to be. Your comment should be considered ignorant.
@@villain383 If so then why have almost all university metallurgical engineering departments vanished over the past 30 years? That is a fact, not my opinion. Materials Science & Engineering departments have replaced many of them. Metallurgical is just not what it was 40 or 50 years ago.
@@davidcarter5813 The metallurgy departments have vanished mainly because of a lack of students interested in studying metals and that includes mining engineering too , the fact that they changed it to materials engineering is a way to make seem more appealing, the need for metals is greater than ever before with this materialistic system mainly in the US , to call it obsolete when the phone you are holding in your hand has different metals that was obtained by extractive metallurgy really tells you aren’t that bright