Check out my list of ME Technical Questions: payhip.com/EngineeringGoneWild How I Spend my 150K Salary: ua-cam.com/video/g1FGX9bfWEI/v-deo.html What are Mechanical Engineering Interviews Like: ua-cam.com/video/HfsBMNKRObo/v-deo.html What do I do as Mechanical Engineer: ua-cam.com/video/1amVwnbuObo/v-deo.html A Day in the Life of a Mechanical Engineer: ua-cam.com/video/jAqowG4fm8Y/v-deo.html What Software do Engineers Need to Learn: ua-cam.com/video/F1SRnJqDPbI/v-deo.html
Bare minimum for a design ME (in addition to what you know from your degree) should be CAD and knowing Y14.5 (GD&T) front to back. If you can do those two things then you are already valuable to the majority of companies. Add skills like ANSYS, basic programming and robotics and then you are irreplaceable
Theory should be first. You can't be good at CAE or CFD without that. SW simulatuons can't be compared with real CAE software like ansys or abaqus. According to this list, you should know everything, but obviosly you'll be below avarage at every specific skill. Of course, It's great to know basics in each direction, but you have to select 2-3 to be really good at, others Could wait.
@@warbydeception3228 Can i know your age and where are you working? out of curiosity, im 26 right now (graduated mechanical engineer), wasted 2 years of my life persuing a dream and failed, so im prety old since almost all begin this journey at 23, so im trying to find my first job, i do have a 8 months internship were sadly learned nothing since it was mostly civil engineering skills.
@@JanDarkyy I’m 26 too. I work as a design engineer for a small company. I had internship experience so that helped me land a job. But I’d say start applying as many places as you can pertaining to what you actually want to do and have some skill to do. Design work will include CAD modeling, GD&T, machine design considerations (recall machine design from college), and the ability to communicate with people like machinists, suppliers, the customer, etc. If you learn all that well enough then any company will want to hang on to you.
Speaking as a guy who has survived and thrived in industry for more than 3 decades, the key habits any engineer needs to master are: Listen and understand the requirements and objectives for the project; Understand and deliver to the required timeline - invariably this is the most important thing; Always produce high quality, accurate work - details are everything; Lastly keep learning and re-skilling. If you master these skills you won’t have a lot to worry about.
I’ve been in the industry for 37 years. I worked my way through college. I’ve been in multiple industries and all levels in those industries. I was a lathe operator, CNC programmer, cad designer and drafting, materias analysis, fea, cfd analyst, did oo programming in C# and Java, lately tons of business intelligence with all kind of tools, I’ve been manger and now executive. I still have my machinery’s handbook and metals black book btw. You were absolutely right on technical skills and soft skills. I would disagree in the grades and activities students do. When I am interviewing new graduates, I don’t expect them to have a ton of experience. If they do, fine and I do consider that if I see the person studying and working. But not all colleges are in a city where they can work in an industrial setting and go to school. So, normally good grades and participation correlates with quick learners, passionate and good communicator individuals. So yes, we definitely see grades in new graduates, and the better the grades the better chance you have of an interview. I do not see too much what school you went to unless we are looking for something specific that you know a school has a good program for. Otherwise I just want a driven individual who is a quick learner, self starter, good communicator, and specially respectful. So study hard, party a little less and you will be fine. Hope that helps!
Not a bad video, but the video letteral covered most of the thing a engineer need to know, even broader than the University syllabus. It's not the "best mechanical engineering skills to learn" but the all skills an mechanical engineer potencially needs to use. And most industral mechanical engineers only know and pracie a small portion of them in their daily job. Young folks do not get overwhelmed by this video. If you want to be an engineer, you will be an engineer, as long as you put in effort.
Am just in my 2nd year in Mechanical eng school Canada , Am so much worried about life after school , so i decided to watch youtube videos from peers so that i could improve on the fields and skills required based on their experiences Thanks man.
I am biased but coding really cant be understated. It sets u apart from the other ME engineers, and because we can use programming for a different field than the IT/EE crowds... this really opens you to a more niche opportunities. I once did some system design/integrator which involves verification (test benches), system controls , data integration with your company's ERP, etc. ofc I dont know how will AI change this in the future
I think soft skills are very important, I have given many interviews I have been rejected many time because of communication and english. I can't speak English, I remember few months ago I was rejected because my english. I cleared technical round and the hiring manager said that if you would speak English I would hire you right now. Because of my technical skills, I think I am very good in it. If anyone reading this comment, please learn English and improve your communication skills. Because engineering drawing not going to help you, they engineering drawing is the communication language for Engineer, it is . 😂😂 But your HR don't care how good you are in this.
This is a f** amazing video, so accurate, to the point, and NO sugar coating. As a first generation student, I gladly appreciate this video and will get your ME tech questions. Thank you!
u did the right thing AI will replace our ass soon, software easy (by easy i mean easy in next 50 years ) hardware will take time but mechanical eng even longer
Formula Student is a great club to join, lots of engineers and recruiters I've spoken to at competitions consider it to be equivalent to having an internship especially if you've had a big involvement in component design for parts on the car. As you'll be doing virtually everything mentioned in the video from design to manufacturing assembly and documentation.
I agree, to some recruiters it’s even more valuable than an internship because, as you said, you have to deal with almost everything mentioned in the video.
As someone with 10 years in Mechanical Design and only having an Associate Degree. A lot of big companies will not hire you, or allow you to promote to the position of Engineer without a Bachelor's Degree. I do the job of a Design Engineer, but am classified as a CAD Designer. My point is, a lot of Engineers where I work don't know how to design nor design for manufacturing. Some companies are coming around to the fact that a degree doesn't hold as much weight as they once thought.
@jeankabumbu7633 I dont know how common this is, but I worked production and applied to and got a job as a Design Engineer at my current place. I have previous pressbrake operating/programming, assembly supervision, automation supervision and CNC programming (turret punch/laser cutting) under my belt with a heavy splash of additive manufacturing. So, maybe I just got really lucky, but its happened at least once. Oh, I dont have any schooling either. 😅
I mean as long as you can get into a.company the sky is the limit to progress further into it. Most companies prefer to promote than to hire. I am also a cad designer for more than a decade but I have way more skills other than CAD.
Can a mechanical engineer who has experience in Design and calculation of cryogenic equipment machinery and other components used in a plant like valves, flanges , motors etc. Work in aerospace?
@@harshchaturvedi9507 Aerospace incorporates lots of aspects of different fields of engineering including the ones you've listed. Depending on which part of aerospace you're interested in I don't see why you wouldn't be successful. (take this with a grain of salt though as I don't have experience)
Currently moving toward my 2nd year of biomedical engineering bachelor and I've noticed that my university doesn't lie heavily on to mechanical part of the major so I've decided to try and master the skills of a mechanical engineer myself. This video helped a lot as a road map, thank you!
I want to add one point under a topic Programming to know how to use macros. In my current job we use lot of macros for simplification of workflow. Many of them were designed by colleagues (mechanical engineers) who wanted to save time with specific tasks which required cycles of steps or pressing many different buttons.
One thing that's super useful to learn as both a quality and product/design engineer is how to program a measurement plan on a CMM. It's a great skill to have if you have access to CMM's at your job and it really puts your GD&T knowledge to the test. Because you have to truly understand everything on a print to set it up properly. You have to understand what it means when you see that U modifier symbol on a profile tolerance and know that it means to offset the boundary of your profile tolerance in that direction or set it up to have the zone in one direction.
Mech. Eng here who graduated with distinction in his MSc and is about to do his Dr. Ing. The most important Skill is: Endurance when it comes to learning. Why? Mechanical engineering is THE engineering study program. Super broad and super important. This means there will allways be something new. Research never stops and you shouldn't be left behind.
There is so much value in this video. Makes me realize I will still have so much learning to do after I graduate next year and throughout my career. thank you!
All the tips are great! I certainly agree with those communication skills tips. From what I’ve seen people who are effective communicators often have an advantage.
thanks man , i am 23 , jobless from india, I made a 5 A4 sized page notes. will remember all of these for great career ahead.. 2 out of 4 years of my mech. engg. course was wasted due to online presence & absence of shop floor activities though my school has that. sadly i need to watch & learn them from youtube. need more videos like these. All my mechanical colleagues are switching to the IT industry due to large requirement . I dont want a career in that . love mechanical engineering.
Just graduated with a BEng Honours degree in Mechanical Engineering in the UK, and I really appreciate this content. I am currently on the job hunt atm, considering to do a masters in advanced mechanical engineering design if I don't find anything suitable soon.
🎯 Key points for quick navigation: 00:00 *💼 Employers look for technical skills to save money and make profits.* 02:20 *🖥️ Essential technical skill: Computer Aided Design (CAD&t=140).* 03:30 *🔧 Essential technical skill: Computer Aided Engineering (CAE&t=210) software.* 04:25 *🏭 Essential technical skill: Understanding manufacturing processes.* 06:43 *🧪 Mechanical engineers should be familiar with instrumentation and design of experiments.* 07:53 *📘 Engineering theory knowledge is crucial for mechanical engineers.* 08:07 *🔩 Tolerance Stack Up Analysis is essential for mechanical engineers.* 09:03 *📐 Mechanical engineers should understand Geometric Dimensioning and Tolerance referencing (GD&T&t=543).* 09:30 *⚙️ Know about Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA&t=570).* 10:12 *💻 Programming skills like Matlab or Python can be beneficial for a mechanical engineer.* 10:26 *🗣️ Soft skills like effective communication, creativity, and time management are important for a successful mechanical engineer.* Made with HARPA AI
Great list! To set yourself apart and improve chances of getting a senior engineer job, getting a Masters degree to obtain advanced engineering and design skills can help. The masters can even in a adjacent field like electrical, aerospace, software, physics, material science, or systems. There are some interesting careers to be had when combining mechanical with those other fields. If your first employer will pay for your degree, even better.
FYI Ansys offers a student version which is pretty much fully featured to download for free. You are limited on the amount of nodes in the Project though.
According to my 20 years experience, you have to master delegating tasks , and tracking the progress,soon or late you have to be a midclass manager in your company and if you don't master delegating,you will be drowning under huge demands.
Verrrrrrrrry few engineers will understand what is necessary and what isn’t. I’m a machinist and the things I’ve seen is mind blowing. It’s even worse when your foreman don’t know any better
You know who has all these skills....A 55 year old man. You can't get all these skills in a matter of years, it takes decades. I am a machinist for 17 years, and you think that going to the machine shop for a couple of months will hone your skills. Nope. I also went back to school to learn mechanical engineering technology (4 year program), I still don't work in the field that I want (Cad designing). I am now starting my own business. I hate that employers want you to know EVERYTHING, bring their company to a new and higher level, then only want to pay you 50k/year.
Learning manufacturing processess in the machine shop was a requirement in the first year at my college, the machinerys handbook was required material for year 2 and up
Great video! I’ve been looking for a video to outline skills I should learn as a mech engineer, as I’ve been working heavily on my value as an individual. I subscribed and am hoping to grow with the advice you offer!
This is lifesaving! I'm preparing for an internship in my sophomore year and am nervous about it. Have you seen interns at your job? What is the general expectation of their knowledge?
Speaking like a specialist without experience. Which industry did you served and how many years? Real world does not works as you described? A person need not to be a super human. Only one or two skills are enough to start and to be be an expert, and choose wisely. the person who do the CAD model or drafting he need not care about the FEA, the person who do the FEA he/she need not to care about much about the GD&T (for example).Tge person who do design the manufacturing proccess need not to learn the electronics, that's the other person responsibilities. That's the respnsibilities for another expert.That's why there are big team works together, and for that there are special kind of enterprise tools used and their working priciples are different. Each of experts are responsible for each of sections, and they work collaboratively. You describes the full Bachelor's 4 years syllabus By Which anyone get scared easily.
The problem with any engineering discipline is that your taught basic engineering principles in school but not mentored in how to develop your career. It's gotten better but the issue is still there.
Is there any video lecture of ansys which you prefer most. I have tried alot of youtube videos but they don't give exact information. It took me almost 1 year to gather good information on ansys but I still feel like there is alot more.
This video makes me sad because I am now 30 and nowhere near capable of accomplishing this goal of becoming an engineer. I am a decently skilled technician in the manufacturing space but have neither the time nor the money to be able to complete a degree in a mechanical engineering program.
I've always wanted to be a technician. The work that you guys do is extremely valuable and practical. 30 is still a pretty young age so I think you definitely can explore options to become a mechanical engineer, whether at your current or future company. Good luck!
@@EngineeringGoneWild I appreciate it man! I can teach you tech work if you can teach me engineering work haha. So, I’ve actually been working a lot with my 3D printer recently and getting better at design is huge on my bucket list right now
Thank you. I have a degree in Mechanical Engineering with no experience. I have not learnt any of the software, where do i start. I am 46 years. Is it too late
Excellent videos as always !!! I have a question for anybody reading. My school offers a dual degree in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, that I am enrolled in. I also thought about switching to just Mechanical since im sort of sick of taking soo many classes but I also feel like im missing out. Im not really set on what I want to do in the field, but I do have an internship starting in May. I am also a Junior going onto my Senior year this fall. Any advice would be greatly appreciated regarsing the Dual degree vs just Mechanical Engineering and as to how I ahould spend my Senior year at University.
There will not be enough time to learn all of this. Learning how to operate cnc lathes and mills as a student is borderline impossible, as nobody will let you crash their expensive machines. And for becoming good in CAE methods: I've been doing FEA for over 4 years, and i still wouldn't consider myself an expert. It takes years to master just FEA, and becoming an expert at cfd meanwhile ist just not possible. You will be able to get results in both, without knowing what exactly is going on, this will lead to dangerous engineers, who base their opinions on colourful pictures, they don't really understand.
Check out my list of ME Technical Questions: payhip.com/EngineeringGoneWild
How I Spend my 150K Salary: ua-cam.com/video/g1FGX9bfWEI/v-deo.html
What are Mechanical Engineering Interviews Like: ua-cam.com/video/HfsBMNKRObo/v-deo.html
What do I do as Mechanical Engineer: ua-cam.com/video/1amVwnbuObo/v-deo.html
A Day in the Life of a Mechanical Engineer: ua-cam.com/video/jAqowG4fm8Y/v-deo.html
What Software do Engineers Need to Learn: ua-cam.com/video/F1SRnJqDPbI/v-deo.html
Nice thanks
Summary
1. CAD (3D and 2D): Solidworks...
2. CAE : FEA and CFD
3. Manufacturing Process
4. Basic robotics
5. Engineering theory
6. GD&T
7. Fail mode and effects
9. Programming: Matlab or Python
10. Soft skills: active listening
Thanks 🙏
Bare minimum for a design ME (in addition to what you know from your degree) should be CAD and knowing Y14.5 (GD&T) front to back. If you can do those two things then you are already valuable to the majority of companies. Add skills like ANSYS, basic programming and robotics and then you are irreplaceable
Theory should be first. You can't be good at CAE or CFD without that.
SW simulatuons can't be compared with real CAE software like ansys or abaqus.
According to this list, you should know everything, but obviosly you'll be below avarage at every specific skill. Of course, It's great to know basics in each direction, but you have to select 2-3 to be really good at, others Could wait.
@@warbydeception3228 Can i know your age and where are you working? out of curiosity, im 26 right now (graduated mechanical engineer), wasted 2 years of my life persuing a dream and failed, so im prety old since almost all begin this journey at 23, so im trying to find my first job, i do have a 8 months internship were sadly learned nothing since it was mostly civil engineering skills.
@@JanDarkyy I’m 26 too. I work as a design engineer for a small company. I had internship experience so that helped me land a job. But I’d say start applying as many places as you can pertaining to what you actually want to do and have some skill to do. Design work will include CAD modeling, GD&T, machine design considerations (recall machine design from college), and the ability to communicate with people like machinists, suppliers, the customer, etc. If you learn all that well enough then any company will want to hang on to you.
Speaking as a guy who has survived and thrived in industry for more than 3 decades, the key habits any engineer needs to master are: Listen and understand the requirements and objectives for the project; Understand and deliver to the required timeline - invariably this is the most important thing; Always produce high quality, accurate work - details are everything; Lastly keep learning and re-skilling. If you master these skills you won’t have a lot to worry about.
can you suggest good resource for tolerance stack up ?
Mmmm......
@@edwarddjan8319 “Mmmm” ? I have no idea what point you’re making. Are you saying you disagree?
I think he's hungry@@donharrold1375
I feel like it'd be necessary to have a physical list of objectives on hand
I’ve been in the industry for 37 years. I worked my way through college. I’ve been in multiple industries and all levels in those industries. I was a lathe operator, CNC programmer, cad designer and drafting, materias analysis, fea, cfd analyst, did oo programming in C# and Java, lately tons of business intelligence with all kind of tools, I’ve been manger and now executive. I still have my machinery’s handbook and metals black book btw. You were absolutely right on technical skills and soft skills. I would disagree in the grades and activities students do. When I am interviewing new graduates, I don’t expect them to have a ton of experience. If they do, fine and I do consider that if I see the person studying and working. But not all colleges are in a city where they can work in an industrial setting and go to school. So, normally good grades and participation correlates with quick learners, passionate and good communicator individuals. So yes, we definitely see grades in new graduates, and the better the grades the better chance you have of an interview. I do not see too much what school you went to unless we are looking for something specific that you know a school has a good program for. Otherwise I just want a driven individual who is a quick learner, self starter, good communicator, and specially respectful. So study hard, party a little less and you will be fine. Hope that helps!
Hello and thankyou for sharing it assist the younger generation.
Can you assist me to link of your black metals book I've never heard of it.
Thanks for your comments sir , Basically its a million dollar worth experienced talk.Thank you once again 👏
This is the best video available on the internet in this space. The entire concept of mechanical engineering got cleared.
One of the best video about what exactly the skill requirement for a mechanical engineer is!!!!!
Not a bad video, but the video letteral covered most of the thing a engineer need to know, even broader than the University syllabus. It's not the "best mechanical engineering skills to learn" but the all skills an mechanical engineer potencially needs to use. And most industral mechanical engineers only know and pracie a small portion of them in their daily job. Young folks do not get overwhelmed by this video. If you want to be an engineer, you will be an engineer, as long as you put in effort.
but i wanna be hired before i graduate. Any tips?
Am just in my 2nd year in Mechanical eng school Canada , Am so much worried about life after school , so i decided to watch youtube videos from peers so that i could improve on the fields and skills required based on their experiences Thanks man.
Hello bro, What would you decided now ??
I’m a Mechatronics Engineering student and this video was so resourceful for me too. Thank you!
I am biased but coding really cant be understated. It sets u apart from the other ME engineers, and because we can use programming for a different field than the IT/EE crowds... this really opens you to a more niche opportunities. I once did some system design/integrator which involves verification (test benches), system controls , data integration with your company's ERP, etc.
ofc I dont know how will AI change this in the future
I think soft skills are very important, I have given many interviews I have been rejected many time because of communication and english. I can't speak English, I remember few months ago I was rejected because my english. I cleared technical round and the hiring manager said that if you would speak English I would hire you right now. Because of my technical skills, I think I am very good in it. If anyone reading this comment, please learn English and improve your communication skills. Because engineering drawing not going to help you, they engineering drawing is the communication language for Engineer, it is . 😂😂 But your HR don't care how good you are in this.
This is a f** amazing video, so accurate, to the point, and NO sugar coating. As a first generation student, I gladly appreciate this video and will get your ME tech questions. Thank you!
Switch my major from computer engineering to mechanical engineering, and this channel is basically a gold mine for my college years.
sameeeeeee
u did the right thing
AI will replace our ass soon, software easy (by easy i mean easy in next 50 years ) hardware will take time but mechanical eng even longer
@@ko-Daegu I totally agree, it's happening already
@@ko-Daegugo for AI mechanical engineering degree…
Bro what???? CS engineers are earning mad money.. my branch (mech) is literally dead. Why would you do that??
Formula Student is a great club to join, lots of engineers and recruiters I've spoken to at competitions consider it to be equivalent to having an internship especially if you've had a big involvement in component design for parts on the car. As you'll be doing virtually everything mentioned in the video from design to manufacturing assembly and documentation.
I agree, to some recruiters it’s even more valuable than an internship because, as you said, you have to deal with almost everything mentioned in the video.
As someone with 10 years in Mechanical Design and only having an Associate Degree. A lot of big companies will not hire you, or allow you to promote to the position of Engineer without a Bachelor's Degree. I do the job of a Design Engineer, but am classified as a CAD Designer. My point is, a lot of Engineers where I work don't know how to design nor design for manufacturing. Some companies are coming around to the fact that a degree doesn't hold as much weight as they once thought.
So do you think it’s possible to get a job as a design engineer without a degree as long as you know what to do? (Self taught).
@jeankabumbu7633 I dont know how common this is, but I worked production and applied to and got a job as a Design Engineer at my current place. I have previous pressbrake operating/programming, assembly supervision, automation supervision and CNC programming (turret punch/laser cutting) under my belt with a heavy splash of additive manufacturing. So, maybe I just got really lucky, but its happened at least once. Oh, I dont have any schooling either. 😅
I mean as long as you can get into a.company the sky is the limit to progress further into it. Most companies prefer to promote than to hire. I am also a cad designer for more than a decade but I have way more skills other than CAD.
Your company actually saw value in your experience. My company is the opposite.
I will hire people with experience versus a degree any day of the week. We have to actually design and build things.
Currently work as a mechanical engineer at a large aerospace company. Every point you made was spot on. Great video!
Can a mechanical engineer who has experience in Design and calculation of cryogenic equipment machinery and other components used in a plant like valves, flanges , motors etc. Work in aerospace?
@@harshchaturvedi9507 Aerospace incorporates lots of aspects of different fields of engineering including the ones you've listed. Depending on which part of aerospace you're interested in I don't see why you wouldn't be successful. (take this with a grain of salt though as I don't have experience)
Currently moving toward my 2nd year of biomedical engineering bachelor and I've noticed that my university doesn't lie heavily on to mechanical part of the major so I've decided to try and master the skills of a mechanical engineer myself. This video helped a lot as a road map, thank you!
I want to add one point under a topic Programming to know how to use macros. In my current job we use lot of macros for simplification of workflow. Many of them were designed by colleagues (mechanical engineers) who wanted to save time with specific tasks which required cycles of steps or pressing many different buttons.
One thing that's super useful to learn as both a quality and product/design engineer is how to program a measurement plan on a CMM. It's a great skill to have if you have access to CMM's at your job and it really puts your GD&T knowledge to the test. Because you have to truly understand everything on a print to set it up properly. You have to understand what it means when you see that U modifier symbol on a profile tolerance and know that it means to offset the boundary of your profile tolerance in that direction or set it up to have the zone in one direction.
Mech. Eng here who graduated with distinction in his MSc and is about to do his Dr. Ing.
The most important Skill is: Endurance when it comes to learning.
Why?
Mechanical engineering is THE engineering study program. Super broad and super important. This means there will allways be something new. Research never stops and you shouldn't be left behind.
If only there was content creator like this for every subject or work area...
What if u go into mechanical engineering in order to build an iron man suit ??
Real
powerplant, rocket, tank, missiles... so onnnn
Call elon musk
Several teams have worked on or are working on real life versions of the Iron Man suit.
Mee too🤪....got into mechanical by watching Tony stark ❤
There is so much value in this video. Makes me realize I will still have so much learning to do after I graduate next year and throughout my career. thank you!
All the tips are great! I certainly agree with those communication skills tips. From what I’ve seen people who are effective communicators often have an advantage.
thanks man , i am 23 , jobless from india, I made a 5 A4 sized page notes. will remember all of these for great career ahead.. 2 out of 4 years of my mech. engg. course was wasted due to online presence & absence of shop floor activities though my school has that. sadly i need to watch & learn them from youtube.
need more videos like these.
All my mechanical colleagues are switching to the IT industry due to large requirement . I dont want a career in that .
love mechanical engineering.
Gd&t and tolerance stack up are so difficult to learn by your own without industry experience.
you deserve more than 5 stars
we have a well-known poetry in arabic which sumerize the problem
لولا المشقه ساد الناس كلهم ...الجود يفقر والإقدام قتال
Just graduated with a BEng Honours degree in Mechanical Engineering in the UK, and I really appreciate this content. I am currently on the job hunt atm, considering to do a masters in advanced mechanical engineering design if I don't find anything suitable soon.
Hey man how's it going?
In my opinion it's better to master two/three of these skills than an average knowledge of everything
🎯 Key points for quick navigation:
00:00 *💼 Employers look for technical skills to save money and make profits.*
02:20 *🖥️ Essential technical skill: Computer Aided Design (CAD&t=140).*
03:30 *🔧 Essential technical skill: Computer Aided Engineering (CAE&t=210) software.*
04:25 *🏭 Essential technical skill: Understanding manufacturing processes.*
06:43 *🧪 Mechanical engineers should be familiar with instrumentation and design of experiments.*
07:53 *📘 Engineering theory knowledge is crucial for mechanical engineers.*
08:07 *🔩 Tolerance Stack Up Analysis is essential for mechanical engineers.*
09:03 *📐 Mechanical engineers should understand Geometric Dimensioning and Tolerance referencing (GD&T&t=543).*
09:30 *⚙️ Know about Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA&t=570).*
10:12 *💻 Programming skills like Matlab or Python can be beneficial for a mechanical engineer.*
10:26 *🗣️ Soft skills like effective communication, creativity, and time management are important for a successful mechanical engineer.*
Made with HARPA AI
I wish I discovered this video earlier in my degree years. Quality information
Great list! To set yourself apart and improve chances of getting a senior engineer job, getting a Masters degree to obtain advanced engineering and design skills can help. The masters can even in a adjacent field like electrical, aerospace, software, physics, material science, or systems. There are some interesting careers to be had when combining mechanical with those other fields. If your first employer will pay for your degree, even better.
Accurate information as mechanical engineer in working in automotive industry...
Every mechanical engineer should watch this
FYI Ansys offers a student version which is pretty much fully featured to download for free.
You are limited on the amount of nodes in the Project though.
The best and clear explanation of what mechanical engineers need to have, i'm happy i've hit some of your tips
Facts💪
According to my 20 years experience, you have to master delegating tasks , and tracking the progress,soon or late you have to be a midclass manager in your company and if you don't master delegating,you will be drowning under huge demands.
Never yet seen one of you guys make sense in anything you do!
You are amazing, I have written so much even Im almost at the end of the road of being a student, thank you
I can't believe I get this information free, thank a lot there's no wrong to startover 🔥
Could you please make a video on contents of technical interview for mechanical engineering positions?
What I need right now is to see an example of your CV tbh!!
Hi from engineer student in Malaysia ❤
Great video. You explained everything very well and I just want to mention for 3D printed parts you can use .3mf too.
Clear presentation with top tier content. Peace!
thanks you saved my career path
Thank you for the tips!!!!!! This will help me and everyone else, to become better Mechanical Engineers. Thanks so much 😊😊!!!!!
Verrrrrrrrry few engineers will understand what is necessary and what isn’t. I’m a machinist and the things I’ve seen is mind blowing. It’s even worse when your foreman don’t know any better
This is exactly what I was serching for thank you ❤
This is so good! I will definitely add this to my list of videos to send to me students.
You know who has all these skills....A 55 year old man. You can't get all these skills in a matter of years, it takes decades. I am a machinist for 17 years, and you think that going to the machine shop for a couple of months will hone your skills. Nope. I also went back to school to learn mechanical engineering technology (4 year program), I still don't work in the field that I want (Cad designing). I am now starting my own business. I hate that employers want you to know EVERYTHING, bring their company to a new and higher level, then only want to pay you 50k/year.
Learning manufacturing processess in the machine shop was a requirement in the first year at my college, the machinerys handbook was required material for year 2 and up
Great video! I’ve been looking for a video to outline skills I should learn as a mech engineer, as I’ve been working heavily on my value as an individual. I subscribed and am hoping to grow with the advice you offer!
This is lifesaving! I'm preparing for an internship in my sophomore year and am nervous about it. Have you seen interns at your job? What is the general expectation of their knowledge?
Can you please make a video about How to read Engineering drawings (Steel structure Fabrication) please
Awesome video! Love the detailed roadmap.
I wish this video existed when I was in college. Youngsters listen to the video!
Nice video. I like the part about always working to develop creativity.
I appreciate the amazing video once again, showcasing your excellent expertise. 🙌 Thank you for sharing your valuable knowledge. 🎉
Bro the info you are providing is to the point, well structured, broad. But for your channel I think you should focus a bit on sound it's low.
Quality content 👌🏻
Awesome video, nicely broken down and clear for learning and trying gain the specific engineering skills for mechanical and design engineering.👌
thank you for the information
If only i found this video when i was still in college...
Thank you for sharing your experience,
I am going to pursue Mechanical Engineering, this video gave me an idea at what skills I need to learn
Grandes dicas. Muito bom, serve muito para outros profissionais também.
Thanks for this video. It will help me improve my chances as a mechanical engineer.
Incredibly helpful!
Glad we have this for reference.
I’m glad you found this helpful and appreciate the support!
This video is extremely useful thank you so much for this
Very good video, very clear and effective communication. Thank you!
thank you very much
Good video, god bless you
Thank you so much for this clarity
Speaking like a specialist without experience. Which industry did you served and how many years? Real world does not works as you described? A person need not to be a super human. Only one or two skills are enough to start and to be be an expert, and choose wisely. the person who do the CAD model or drafting he need not care about the FEA, the person who do the FEA he/she need not to care about much about the GD&T (for example).Tge person who do design the manufacturing proccess need not to learn the electronics, that's the other person responsibilities. That's the respnsibilities for another expert.That's why there are big team works together, and for that there are special kind of enterprise tools used and their working priciples are different. Each of experts are responsible for each of sections, and they work collaboratively. You describes the full Bachelor's 4 years syllabus By Which anyone get scared easily.
Such a valuable information, taking notes....... thank you
Very concise
Thank you. Very informative.
The problem with any engineering discipline is that your taught basic engineering principles in school but not mentored in how to develop your career. It's gotten better but the issue is still there.
Is there any video lecture of ansys which you prefer most. I have tried alot of youtube videos but they don't give exact information. It took me almost 1 year to gather good information on ansys but I still feel like there is alot more.
This video makes me sad because I am now 30 and nowhere near capable of accomplishing this goal of becoming an engineer. I am a decently skilled technician in the manufacturing space but have neither the time nor the money to be able to complete a degree in a mechanical engineering program.
I've always wanted to be a technician. The work that you guys do is extremely valuable and practical. 30 is still a pretty young age so I think you definitely can explore options to become a mechanical engineer, whether at your current or future company. Good luck!
@@EngineeringGoneWild I appreciate it man! I can teach you tech work if you can teach me engineering work haha. So, I’ve actually been working a lot with my 3D printer recently and getting better at design is huge on my bucket list right now
Thanks from heart ❤
Good..... Very Informative
Thank you!!
Nice info, thanks for sharing, well done :)
Thanks. Grat vid!
Thank you. I have a degree in Mechanical Engineering with no experience. I have not learnt any of the software, where do i start. I am 46 years. Is it too late
don't worry, be happy
This guy is the best
I wish i saw this a year ago . Have reached the final year now already.
Segmental Elbows, Cones and other.
Thank you ❤
bro which software are you using during the Multi-tasking time period?
Please can you make a video about engineering physics?
good video, maybe the best one
Thank you
great info, ty
您的视频真的超棒。❤
Excellent videos as always !!! I have a question for anybody reading. My school offers a dual degree in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, that I am enrolled in. I also thought about switching to just Mechanical since im sort of sick of taking soo many classes but I also feel like im missing out. Im not really set on what I want to do in the field, but I do have an internship starting in May. I am also a Junior going onto my Senior year this fall. Any advice would be greatly appreciated regarsing the Dual degree vs just Mechanical Engineering and as to how I ahould spend my Senior year at University.
Imagine watching this beautiful video and not having a laptop to use. Somehow 😢😢
There will not be enough time to learn all of this.
Learning how to operate cnc lathes and mills as a student is borderline impossible, as nobody will let you crash their expensive machines. And for becoming good in CAE methods: I've been doing FEA for over 4 years, and i still wouldn't consider myself an expert. It takes years to master just FEA, and becoming an expert at cfd meanwhile ist just not possible.
You will be able to get results in both, without knowing what exactly is going on, this will lead to dangerous engineers, who base their opinions on colourful pictures, they don't really understand.