As a senior in mechanical engineering taking a robotics course with forward and inverse kinematics, I can say it is worth it. The main reasons for me are: 1. I can design, build, program, and play with robots for any reason I like 2. I feel like I can build almost anything with enough time and resources (I don't feel limited) 3. The pay is fantastic 4. You don't need to be brilliant, just a very well organized and hard working individual. The downsides are: 1. Lots and lots of math 2. Overwhelming course loads; everyone around you will be sacrificing either their sleep or social life to keep up with the work load from all their classes. But this naturally creates groups of people who work together to learn more efficiently and lighten the work load. 3. Your physical health will suffer if you do not set aside time for some physical exercise, which will in turn lower your energy levels and ultimately crush your ability to sustain high mental work loads. Life is a balancing act.
Figuring out the "balancing act" is a super underrated part of engineering university. Once you find how to excel in your classes and extracurriculars while also keeping your mental space stable (friends, exercise, etc.), you're golden 👍 Thanks for adding your perspective! Greatly appreciate that Timothy 🙂
I need help. I'm a grade 11(STEM) student who excels in subjects relating math and science. I will be an international student(Philippines to North Carolina). A few days ago I don't know what course I wanted to take in college but I did know I want to be an engineer. My first and second choices were Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. I recently looked into both in depth and found out those two may not fit me. So I looked for more engineering majors. As I was searching, I came across Mechatronics Engineering and became interested. I like working with my hands but particularly have a hard time with coding(I'm not interested). Coding, Time management, Reports, and Creativity are what I'm worried about. I don't want to take a course that, in the middle of getting my degree, I won't be interested in/I want to get out of. Can anyone provide me some insight or advice? (Thank you for reading this far)
I need help. I'm a grade 11(STEM) student who excels in subjects relating math and science. I will be an international student(Philippines to North Carolina). A few days ago I don't know what course I wanted to take in college but I did know I want to be an engineer. My first and second choices were Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. I recently looked into both in depth and found out those two may not fit me. So I looked for more engineering majors. As I was searching, I came across Mechatronics Engineering and became interested. I like working with my hands but particularly have a hard time with coding(I'm not interested). Coding, Time management, Reports, and Creativity are what I'm worried about. I don't want to take a course that, in the middle of getting my degree, I won't be interested in/I want to get out of. Can anyone provide me some insight or advice? (Thank you for reading this far)
Criminally underrated video. Studying mechatronics myself, procrastinating finishing my final technical report on a robot! If any aspiring engineers read this, lemme tell you there’s a light at the end of the tunnel. It took me an inhuman effort to get through years 1 and 2, but when we finally start making designs in year 3 (despite it being even HARDER than the exams), the projects are so fun that it makes me excited to work all the time. But report writing blows :/
I need help. I'm a grade 11(STEM) student who excels in subjects relating math and science. I will be an international student(Philippines to North Carolina). A few days ago I don't know what course I wanted to take in college but I did know I want to be an engineer. My first and second choices were Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. I recently looked into both in depth and found out those two may not fit me. So I looked for more engineering majors. As I was searching, I came across Mechatronics Engineering and became interested. I like working with my hands but particularly have a hard time with coding(I'm not interested). Coding, Time management, Reports, and Creativity are what I'm worried about. I don't want to take a course that, in the middle of getting my degree, I won't be interested in/I want to get out of. Can anyone provide me some insight or advice? (Thank you for reading this far)
@@youigaitebacuno7123 I'm not the original person you had asked, but I have some feedback from another perspective, since a couple of others didn't respond to your question; I have three degrees and am considering making the switch to STEM/Mechatronics next year, as well. If you're good at Maths & Science (and have a good understanding of English, which you seem to), you should be fine. The first two years will be all Maths & Science. Depending on the program, you will have to take some coding with Mechatronics, but they're not just going to throw you in and hope you swim. The lectures will be comprehensive, there are tutoring labs/tutors available and there will most likely be student organizations for coding you could join for extra help, as well. Coding is going to be my problem as well, but as long as you put in the time and the effort, you will at least pass the course(s). It will all be worth it and everything will just start making sense together. Let me know if you have any further questions! :)
Starting out this path with an Associate in applied science - Mechatronics Engineer. Since its an associates its a little less of a work load but easier to digest. Gives me breathing room you could say if I continue down the path.
I’m currently working for a company under Mechatronics engineers… I am an assembler for their ideas being put together and have been in love with my job but wanted to know how do I become one who created this machine that I’m assembling myself. To make it better and easier for future assembly and companies and clients without issues 😅
I’m interested in studying mechatronics, but many colleges don’t offer it in the US. If you had to choose between mechanical, electrical, or computer engineering, which one would be closer to mechatronics?
Great question. The answer really depends on your personal preference and what your universities offer. What is your favorite out of the three? If it is electrical or computer, make sure to mechanical electives. If it is mechanical, make sure to take programming and circuits electives. Some schools will not even have mechanical courses or vice versa, so in those cases you would have to take the closest major you can and do projects/club work/ similar to fill the wholes in missing experience. Cheers
Yo I’m a senior mechanical engineer student. I’d say go mechanical because you’ll get to experience circuits and microelectronics while learning mechanical engineering. But like he stated already, check your schools curriculum for each degree and make a decision based on that.
I would say go for mechanical engineering but take additional classes in electrical engineering and programming classes. For Electrical 1. Electrical Circuits 1 and 2 2. Electronics 1 and 2 3. Digital Logic 4. Microcontrollers For Computer Science 1. C plus plus 2.Python 3. Vera Log 4. Computer Architecture
I'm a Mechatronics student in Namibia 🇳🇦 in Africa honestly we're far from this, we're still considered Mechanics really praying we get to this point because it's amazing truly out of this world 🌎 ❤️ 😅😊
I need help. I'm a grade 11(STEM) student who excels in subjects relating math and science. I will be an international student(Philippines to North Carolina). A few days ago I don't know what course I wanted to take in college but I did know I want to be an engineer. My first and second choices were Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. I recently looked into both in depth and found out those two may not fit me. So I looked for more engineering majors. As I was searching, I came across Mechatronics Engineering and became interested. I like working with my hands but particularly have a hard time with coding(I'm not interested). Coding, Time management, Reports, and Creativity are what I'm worried about. I don't want to take a course that, in the middle of getting my degree, I won't be interested in/I want to get out of. Can anyone provide me some insight or advice? (Thank you for reading this far)
Hello, if I was you I wouldn’t worry about reports, creativity, and time management. No matter what major you choose you will have to learn all three and anyone can do it. I would continue exploring majors, engineering or not, and find where you are most interested and take that route. The best thing you can do is sign up for something that you think you’ll enjoy for years to come!👍
Your clip gave me a very good insight into a specialty that I had many questions about, so thank you. But I have one question that bothers me: Does a person need to be a “genius” in order to innovate in this field? Because I feel like if I wasn't , it would be impossible for me to achieve anything. I would like a realistic answer, please.
Thanks for the comment! The answer is no! Most people are not. As a young engineer you get a lot of help from the more senior engineers and as you get more experienced you naturally become more comfortable and useful in the field. Most engineers are smart, very few are geniuses!
Sorry for the late response! We have a number of resource for you. First, we have a discord (discord.gg/dc5kUKSVj7) where you get as many questions answered as you want. Second, since mechatronics is mechanical, electrical, and software, we recommend getting started with these. A great goal would be to program an arduino (microcontroller) to accomplish different mechanical goals. This can be accomplished with this arduino kit (amzn.to/44IzvE8). We'd be happy to help you learn how to use this in the discord 🙂 If you're not interested in this option let us know in the discord and we can find something else that can work for you! Happy you're getting into engineering my friend. Talk to you soon!
Sorry for beeing late to respond. I am studing mechatronics (Not in the US, but i pretty much agree with the Video). In Order to gain a Headstart i highly recomend the Arduino Microcontroller. It teaches you in beginnerfreindly ways the groundworks of Programming and electronics, is easy to implement and can be scaled up to very complex Projects. The Original Ardoinos are rather expensive, but there are tons of Clones on the Market and they all work great (I only have one Original Arduino Controller and that was gifted to me) because the whole Arduino Projcet is Open Source and was based on the Atmega,. This Year however, Ardiono anounced a new Model which is up to scale witch current Industry-used-Microcontrollers. You can start to programm in the Userfreinly Arduino IDE and controll LEDs (small Lamps), Motors a lot of Sensors and a bunch more stuff. And the best part is, you can find most of the tutorials on the Internet for free!
I am a second year mechatronics student, and I think mechatronics is more useful if you want to get into automation. Mechatronics give you a broad knowledge base where you learn both control theory, PLC-programming, C++, python, math, physics and the like
I'm surely interested with the video, then im a diploma student taking mechatronics.. and then, i wish to create my own projects based on Mechatronics concepts, what are the smallest projects do you recommend me to do? So that, i can be strong in this carrier ??
Arduino projects! We have a link in the description of this video for a good kit. You can use this to program and start learning circuits and can hook it up to mechanical projects as well.
Hi, i am a Mechatronic engineering technology student in an university and i have some questions: Do i have to be good at math? I signed up this course because of my fashion of building stuffs and machines but i am kinda bad at math. I am good at chemistry and biology more ( my physics is also good) And is it good for me to choose my major because of my fashion more than subjects that i am good at?
Hello! Good at math depends. You definitely need to get through hard math classes. Some are more naturals but some need to work harder. As long as you can work really hard and try hard, you’ll be just fine. Ideally you want something you’re good at AND love, but you should really go for something you love. Because you can always learn to get better at something.
Hello there! Thanks for the comment :) This is an interesting combination that I haven’t thought of before. So without looking into it, take my message with a grain of salt. Mechatronics generally isn’t known for strong core software skills, but I bet you can find a university that would let you take a number of software courses as electives alongside the normal mechatronics ones. So that you’re not pulling your hair out when trying to learn the software skills necessary for the AI masters program. The other thing I’ll say is that from my perspective it’s uncharted territory bc not many take that path and AI is rapidly evolving. Also, the actual concepts and practices learned for each topic don’t have a ton of overlap. BUT we have no firm idea where AI is going to take us and how it will ultimately affect the engineering landscape, so there is a factor of uncertainty there that could go in your favor or against it. So I’d say to outline what you want to do with both of those skill sets, and if you’re confident there is a market for it, go for it. OR if you’re just absolutely in love with the two subjects, it still could be very worth it to go for it. Whether it is a good idea or not is totally up to the student 👍 Hope this helps!
No problem! I recommend digging into mechatronics curriculum, looking at different course loads and seeing which parts of the degree are the most interesting to you. Make sure to check out other degrees too!) Whatever you find the most interesting you should explore with projects and research, that’ll lead you to your most successful path 👍
Lol username fits. Heck yeah we can! If you want to hop into our discord (description) and tag me @ yoseph I can give you a quick rundown, but we'll absolutely make the video 👍
There are a ton of careers! The most common are robotics, manufacturing, and embedded systems but these have a lot of different careers in themselves. But mechatronics touches on computer, mechanical, and electrical so there are ultimately ton of possibilities - more than the average engineering path 👍
Hello my friend! Actually we have a video coming out in about 3.5 hours from now discussing the differences between robotics and mechatronics engineering. If you watch it and are still confused feel free to leave another comment and we will answer any question you have! 🙂
I shall become Dr robotnic once I take the necessary classes and such ( I'm not kidding either, I will build some wacky things and dress like him atleast once a week)
Great, we're happy to hear it! Each university has a different path and courses offered, but we're creating an all-inclusive list on our website, release date TBD. For now, here is a california school's Mechatronics degree courselist: www.csuchico.edu/mmem/_assets/documents/flowcharts/map-meca-23-24.pdf Hope this helps for now!
We actually have a video coming out in a couple weeks that covers this topic! But for the short answer - it pays pretty well lol. Software engineering is always highest paid but mechatronics is up there 🙂
Hello! Depends on what type of weapon design you're looking for - but most likely you're looking for mechanical or aerospace, potentially electrical. Because Mechatronics is a mix of electrical and mechanical, it could work! But most larger defense weapon systems require the whole shabang - software, electrical, mechanical, and all of the many many subfields. Not sure what your intentions are but make sure to be safe! 👍
I mean lets be real in school we see topics from the textbooks we see them as difficult but when you understand it , it is not difficult like that so yeah
Coolest Robot in the video? We got Roomba 😎
Iron Man for sureeeee
Cool
As a senior in mechanical engineering taking a robotics course with forward and inverse kinematics, I can say it is worth it. The main reasons for me are:
1. I can design, build, program, and play with robots for any reason I like
2. I feel like I can build almost anything with enough time and resources (I don't feel limited)
3. The pay is fantastic
4. You don't need to be brilliant, just a very well organized and hard working individual.
The downsides are:
1. Lots and lots of math
2. Overwhelming course loads; everyone around you will be sacrificing either their sleep or social life to keep up with the work load from all their classes. But this naturally creates groups of people who work together to learn more efficiently and lighten the work load.
3. Your physical health will suffer if you do not set aside time for some physical exercise, which will in turn lower your energy levels and ultimately crush your ability to sustain high mental work loads. Life is a balancing act.
Figuring out the "balancing act" is a super underrated part of engineering university. Once you find how to excel in your classes and extracurriculars while also keeping your mental space stable (friends, exercise, etc.), you're golden 👍
Thanks for adding your perspective! Greatly appreciate that Timothy 🙂
Hi..can u help me..pls ..pls..pls..
I really really want to pursue a course in mechatronics engineering.
Can I know about mectronics how hard it is
I need help. I'm a grade 11(STEM) student who excels in subjects relating math and science. I will be an international student(Philippines to North Carolina).
A few days ago I don't know what course I wanted to take in college but I did know I want to be an engineer.
My first and second choices were Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. I recently looked into both in depth and found out those two may not fit me. So I looked for more engineering majors.
As I was searching, I came across Mechatronics Engineering and became interested. I like working with my hands but particularly have a hard time with coding(I'm not interested). Coding, Time management, Reports, and Creativity are what I'm worried about.
I don't want to take a course that, in the middle of getting my degree, I won't be interested in/I want to get out of. Can anyone provide me some insight or advice?
(Thank you for reading this far)
As a recent Mechanical Engineering graduate who wants to explore Mechatronics engineering, this video was a great insight into the field.
Glad you liked it! 😃
@@EngineeringInsiders can a CSE a grad do MS in Mechatronics?
I need help. I'm a grade 11(STEM) student who excels in subjects relating math and science. I will be an international student(Philippines to North Carolina).
A few days ago I don't know what course I wanted to take in college but I did know I want to be an engineer.
My first and second choices were Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. I recently looked into both in depth and found out those two may not fit me. So I looked for more engineering majors.
As I was searching, I came across Mechatronics Engineering and became interested. I like working with my hands but particularly have a hard time with coding(I'm not interested). Coding, Time management, Reports, and Creativity are what I'm worried about.
I don't want to take a course that, in the middle of getting my degree, I won't be interested in/I want to get out of. Can anyone provide me some insight or advice?
(Thank you for reading this far)
@@youigaitebacuno7123try civil , or electrical engineering as this doesn't not involve coding
@@youigaitebacuno7123let me know if someone replies to you.
Criminally underrated video. Studying mechatronics myself, procrastinating finishing my final technical report on a robot! If any aspiring engineers read this, lemme tell you there’s a light at the end of the tunnel. It took me an inhuman effort to get through years 1 and 2, but when we finally start making designs in year 3 (despite it being even HARDER than the exams), the projects are so fun that it makes me excited to work all the time. But report writing blows :/
I need help. I'm a grade 11(STEM) student who excels in subjects relating math and science. I will be an international student(Philippines to North Carolina).
A few days ago I don't know what course I wanted to take in college but I did know I want to be an engineer.
My first and second choices were Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. I recently looked into both in depth and found out those two may not fit me. So I looked for more engineering majors.
As I was searching, I came across Mechatronics Engineering and became interested. I like working with my hands but particularly have a hard time with coding(I'm not interested). Coding, Time management, Reports, and Creativity are what I'm worried about.
I don't want to take a course that, in the middle of getting my degree, I won't be interested in/I want to get out of. Can anyone provide me some insight or advice?
(Thank you for reading this far)
@@youigaitebacuno7123 I'm not the original person you had asked, but I have some feedback from another perspective, since a couple of others didn't respond to your question; I have three degrees and am considering making the switch to STEM/Mechatronics next year, as well. If you're good at Maths & Science (and have a good understanding of English, which you seem to), you should be fine. The first two years will be all Maths & Science. Depending on the program, you will have to take some coding with Mechatronics, but they're not just going to throw you in and hope you swim. The lectures will be comprehensive, there are tutoring labs/tutors available and there will most likely be student organizations for coding you could join for extra help, as well. Coding is going to be my problem as well, but as long as you put in the time and the effort, you will at least pass the course(s). It will all be worth it and everything will just start making sense together. Let me know if you have any further questions! :)
I think every single engineering has some sort of coding. @@youigaitebacuno7123
Starting out this path with an Associate in applied science - Mechatronics Engineer.
Since its an associates its a little less of a work load but easier to digest. Gives me breathing room you could say if I continue down the path.
Same brother I’m wrapping up my AAS next month
This is such a great overview of what its like being in the field!
🙏 Thanks to you! 🤝
As a newly graduate Electrical Engineer. It. Was the mostly difficult part of my life but the most rewarding. Its worth it
Fantastic video on mechatronics. Definitely deserving of more views
Thank you! We are glad you liked it so much 🙂
I'm starting out my mechatronics engineering path tomorrow, i think i really am going to love it!
How is it going?
How’s the math
How's it going???
So how’s it going?
I’m currently working for a company under Mechatronics engineers… I am an assembler for their ideas being put together and have been in love with my job but wanted to know how do I become one who created this machine that I’m assembling myself. To make it better and easier for future assembly and companies and clients without issues 😅
That's Great And Easy Give Us A Clear Info About Mechatronics Engineering!! Great work
Thanks!! Let us know what you'd like to see next!
Excellent video! I truly agree with the message about money means nothing unless you enjoy what you do! It’s always important to keep that in mind.
Thanks Ed!! Glad you caught that one. What did you think of the Roomba? 😂
This video make feel so proud as a mechatronic engineer ❤
Dislikes are come from mechatronic engineer that try to making arm whichs pressing dislike button
Can you make a video of the type of career and company for a mechatronic engineer??
Can you you do: so you want to be a cybersecurity engineer
Best video on mechatronics I have ever seen
Dang! Quite the accolade, thanks!
As a Mechatronics technician if you want be a menace to a society be my guest.
What do you mean by being a menace to a society?????
@@Preus-by8rulike fr what he talking about ?
So can a certified engineer, in this field, officially call themselves a Mechatron?!
No
Wonderful content.
But why is it that the term Artificial Intelligence is rarely used in videos which talk about robotics and mechatronics
Because nothing is actually AI yet. It’s all machine learning or ML. Companies just say “AI” to boost sales
is there a difference between electromechanical engineering and mechatronics engineering??
Can software engineering undergraduates do a masters in mechatronic engineering and become mechatronic engineers?
I’m interested in studying mechatronics, but many colleges don’t offer it in the US. If you had to choose between mechanical, electrical, or computer engineering, which one would be closer to mechatronics?
Great question. The answer really depends on your personal preference and what your universities offer.
What is your favorite out of the three? If it is electrical or computer, make sure to mechanical electives. If it is mechanical, make sure to take programming and circuits electives.
Some schools will not even have mechanical courses or vice versa, so in those cases you would have to take the closest major you can and do projects/club work/ similar to fill the wholes in missing experience.
Cheers
Yo I’m a senior mechanical engineer student. I’d say go mechanical because you’ll get to experience circuits and microelectronics while learning mechanical engineering. But like he stated already, check your schools curriculum for each degree and make a decision based on that.
I would say go for mechanical engineering but take additional classes in electrical engineering and programming classes.
For Electrical
1. Electrical Circuits 1 and 2
2. Electronics 1 and 2
3. Digital Logic
4. Microcontrollers
For Computer Science
1. C plus plus
2.Python
3. Vera Log
4. Computer Architecture
Same question
What should I do ? I want to study mechatronics engineering but many university in US don't offer . Please help me
😢
Yes absolutely!! ❤✨
Hello dai
Do u recommend computer or megatronic engineering?
such a nice explanation brother. I'm looking for this type of video from few days now i got the ryt video
Heck yeah! Glad it addressed what you were looking for😎
Just searching something related to mechatronics on google and today this video came to my feed..😮
I'm a Mechatronics student in Namibia 🇳🇦 in Africa honestly we're far from this, we're still considered Mechanics really praying we get to this point because it's amazing truly out of this world 🌎 ❤️ 😅😊
Take my number dear I'm in Tanzania 🇹🇿 mechatronics
How's the coding??
@youigaitebacuno7123 there is nothing like that here
I need help. I'm a grade 11(STEM) student who excels in subjects relating math and science. I will be an international student(Philippines to North Carolina).
A few days ago I don't know what course I wanted to take in college but I did know I want to be an engineer.
My first and second choices were Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. I recently looked into both in depth and found out those two may not fit me. So I looked for more engineering majors.
As I was searching, I came across Mechatronics Engineering and became interested. I like working with my hands but particularly have a hard time with coding(I'm not interested). Coding, Time management, Reports, and Creativity are what I'm worried about.
I don't want to take a course that, in the middle of getting my degree, I won't be interested in/I want to get out of. Can anyone provide me some insight or advice?
(Thank you for reading this far)
Hello, if I was you I wouldn’t worry about reports, creativity, and time management. No matter what major you choose you will have to learn all three and anyone can do it. I would continue exploring majors, engineering or not, and find where you are most interested and take that route. The best thing you can do is sign up for something that you think you’ll enjoy for years to come!👍
This is great! Thank you
Thank you so much for commenting! We hope to see you back again! 👍
Your clip gave me a very good insight into a specialty that I had many questions about, so thank you. But I have one question that bothers me: Does a person need to be a “genius” in order to innovate in this field? Because I feel like if I wasn't , it would be impossible for me to achieve anything. I would like a realistic answer, please.
Thanks for the comment! The answer is no! Most people are not. As a young engineer you get a lot of help from the more senior engineers and as you get more experienced you naturally become more comfortable and useful in the field. Most engineers are smart, very few are geniuses!
So helpful and excellent presentation, thank you😊😊😊😊😊
I want to study mechatronics engineering but it seems so complicated 😭😭
Not really
Can a mechatronics engineer pursue automobile manufacturing or there is only robotics?
The toughest degree ever, your school will drown you in work to see if you have the skills to juggle complex tasks.
Is it possible to switch from Physics major to mechatronics after undergrad?
I'm currently still in highschool and am looking to study mechatronics. What should i do to get a headstart and excell before i reach uni?
Sorry for the late response!
We have a number of resource for you.
First, we have a discord (discord.gg/dc5kUKSVj7) where you get as many questions answered as you want.
Second, since mechatronics is mechanical, electrical, and software, we recommend getting started with these. A great goal would be to program an arduino (microcontroller) to accomplish different mechanical goals. This can be accomplished with this arduino kit (amzn.to/44IzvE8).
We'd be happy to help you learn how to use this in the discord 🙂
If you're not interested in this option let us know in the discord and we can find something else that can work for you! Happy you're getting into engineering my friend. Talk to you soon!
Learn Arduino UNO from mc whorter just search his name on youtube
Sorry for beeing late to respond.
I am studing mechatronics (Not in the US, but i pretty much agree with the Video).
In Order to gain a Headstart i highly recomend the Arduino Microcontroller. It teaches you in beginnerfreindly ways the groundworks of Programming and electronics, is easy to implement and can be scaled up to very complex Projects.
The Original Ardoinos are rather expensive, but there are tons of Clones on the Market and they all work great (I only have one Original Arduino Controller and that was gifted to me) because the whole Arduino Projcet is Open Source and was based on the Atmega,. This Year however, Ardiono anounced a new Model which is up to scale witch current Industry-used-Microcontrollers. You can start to programm in the Userfreinly Arduino IDE and controll LEDs (small Lamps), Motors a lot of Sensors and a bunch more stuff.
And the best part is, you can find most of the tutorials on the Internet for free!
@@ravson8488 do you know any discord community's of mechatronics engineering
^ Second this! Thanks for the comment Ravson!
Do you have to enjoy/be good at maths and physics to enjoy being a mechatronic engineer?
What is the major difference between Mechatronics engineering and robotics engineering.
Which one can i study in master?
*Spoiler alert*
We have this exact video coming out in about 3 and a half weeks! Subscribe so you don't miss it.😄
You can master in both of them!
perfect subjest cuz i like all engineering equally and i want to learn all
I've done mechanical engineering but i have interest in automation what field shall i choose robotics or mechatronics??
I am a second year mechatronics student, and I think mechatronics is more useful if you want to get into automation. Mechatronics give you a broad knowledge base where you learn both control theory, PLC-programming, C++, python, math, physics and the like
Hey can an ELECTRONICS engineer student pursue mechatronics.
What r the courses i have to study extra to fill my mechanics part.
pls do reply
I'm surely interested with the video, then im a diploma student taking mechatronics.. and then, i wish to create my own projects based on Mechatronics concepts, what are the smallest projects do you recommend me to do?
So that, i can be strong in this carrier ??
Arduino projects! We have a link in the description of this video for a good kit. You can use this to program and start learning circuits and can hook it up to mechanical projects as well.
I will reach you again when I won't understand .. Thank you 🙏
2:37
Hi, i am a Mechatronic engineering technology student in an university and i have some questions:
Do i have to be good at math?
I signed up this course because of my fashion of building stuffs and machines but i am kinda bad at math. I am good at chemistry and biology more ( my physics is also good)
And is it good for me to choose my major because of my fashion more than subjects that i am good at?
Hello!
Good at math depends. You definitely need to get through hard math classes. Some are more naturals but some need to work harder. As long as you can work really hard and try hard, you’ll be just fine. Ideally you want something you’re good at AND love, but you should really go for something you love. Because you can always learn to get better at something.
Amazing!
Thanks! 🤝
I have studied diploma in mechanical and in btech i can take mechatronics is beat for my future job and i can take mechanical please reply 🙏
Pls i need the link to the free CAD designs
Is there any course that you are selling to teach mechatronics?
If yes then please do let me know. ❤
7:25
Hi! I wanted to ask if its a good idea to major in mechatronics and after that do a master in ai engineering. Thanks
Hello there! Thanks for the comment :) This is an interesting combination that I haven’t thought of before. So without looking into it, take my message with a grain of salt.
Mechatronics generally isn’t known for strong core software skills, but I bet you can find a university that would let you take a number of software courses as electives alongside the normal mechatronics ones. So that you’re not pulling your hair out when trying to learn the software skills necessary for the AI masters program.
The other thing I’ll say is that from my perspective it’s uncharted territory bc not many take that path and AI is rapidly evolving. Also, the actual concepts and practices learned for each topic don’t have a ton of overlap. BUT we have no firm idea where AI is going to take us and how it will ultimately affect the engineering landscape, so there is a factor of uncertainty there that could go in your favor or against it.
So I’d say to outline what you want to do with both of those skill sets, and if you’re confident there is a market for it, go for it. OR if you’re just absolutely in love with the two subjects, it still could be very worth it to go for it. Whether it is a good idea or not is totally up to the student 👍
Hope this helps!
@@EngineeringInsiders thanks !
@@EngineeringInsiders and one more little question, what would you recommend me if its not AI engineering
No problem! I recommend digging into mechatronics curriculum, looking at different course loads and seeing which parts of the degree are the most interesting to you. Make sure to check out other degrees too!) Whatever you find the most interesting you should explore with projects and research, that’ll lead you to your most successful path 👍
4:15
I am confused between electrical and mechatronics can u do mechatronics vs electrical
Lol username fits. Heck yeah we can! If you want to hop into our discord (description) and tag me @ yoseph I can give you a quick rundown, but we'll absolutely make the video 👍
@@EngineeringInsiders sadly I am not on discord will patently wait for your video.
@@bruhhhhh7279 No problem! We'll gett on it ASAP. If you have any time-sensitive questions just let us know and we will answer them ASAP! 👍
nice!
Thanks! 👍
bro why didn't you reply the question about AI being mentioned why is there nothing on what is going to lead the future talked about in this course
I want to join
What career in mechatronic engineering
There are a ton of careers! The most common are robotics, manufacturing, and embedded systems but these have a lot of different careers in themselves. But mechatronics touches on computer, mechanical, and electrical so there are ultimately ton of possibilities - more than the average engineering path 👍
what about mechatronics engineering with artificial intelligence
the two degree together
love it
Thanks Yoseph!! 😎
Am pretty sucking in coding and not interested in it so what else can i do to have better future as mechatronics graduate
That shouldn’t be a problem! You can focus on the electrical (circuits) or mechanical side of the degree 👍
My brother, I really hope you can answer me about what is closest to automatic robotics or electromechanics. I am very confused.
Hello my friend! Actually we have a video coming out in about 3.5 hours from now discussing the differences between robotics and mechatronics engineering. If you watch it and are still confused feel free to leave another comment and we will answer any question you have! 🙂
I am presently pursuing Mechatronics engineering at IIT Bhilai
Awesome!! Best of luck, friend 👍
I shall become Dr robotnic once I take the necessary classes and such ( I'm not kidding either, I will build some wacky things and dress like him atleast once a week)
This is great video ❤❤❤. I'm a student of Mechatronics in 1st year, may i have a link for mechatronics courses?
Great, we're happy to hear it!
Each university has a different path and courses offered, but we're creating an all-inclusive list on our website, release date TBD. For now, here is a california school's Mechatronics degree courselist: www.csuchico.edu/mmem/_assets/documents/flowcharts/map-meca-23-24.pdf
Hope this helps for now!
Just like "med school insiders"😂😂😂😂
Precisely! That's where we got the idea for the channel. Credits to Kevin Jubbal 🙂
@@EngineeringInsiders GREAT 😃😃❤️❤️❤️
I wanna be mechatronics but im also wondering if it'll pay as much as i wish😮😅
We actually have a video coming out in a couple weeks that covers this topic!
But for the short answer - it pays pretty well lol. Software engineering is always highest paid but mechatronics is up there 🙂
greetings!!! May i know if mechatronics is also the engineering for weapon designing...? if not then which one?
pls let me know😃😃
Hello! Depends on what type of weapon design you're looking for - but most likely you're looking for mechanical or aerospace, potentially electrical. Because Mechatronics is a mix of electrical and mechanical, it could work! But most larger defense weapon systems require the whole shabang - software, electrical, mechanical, and all of the many many subfields.
Not sure what your intentions are but make sure to be safe! 👍
If you had a 1/100 or 1/300 chance to get shot to death or catch HIV hanging at a club would you like those odds?
Lmao wut
Can we stop with the "So you want to?" I'm lactose intolerant, because it's just too lazy and too cheesy 🧀. Its way overdone.
😂😂 For you, we will consider it. Hope you have a great day far from any 🧀
I want to study mechatronics engineering but it seems so complicated 😭😭
I mean lets be real in school we see topics from the textbooks we see them as difficult but when you understand it , it is not difficult like that so yeah