Hello everyone,
I am new to the forum and had a query about the oil and gas industry as well. I was going to post to a new thread but figured since this one was going I would add my query to it since it is essentially in the same vein (apologies if this is hijacking the thread, not sure if this is proper forum etiquette!) I am hoping someone could offer their wisdom and experience regarding the role of a pipelay analysis engineer.
My educational background is in both architecture and engineering and I have worked both in an architectural design firm (2 years) and, more recently, in an engineering consultancy functioning as a structural analysis engineer (1 year). Until recently I pressumed that I would stay in structural engineering (building design); however, I have recently been offered a position in the oil and gas sector as a pipelay analysis engineer. I will be the first to admit I know very little about this industry, the regulations that govern it, or the day-to-day functions of a pipelay analysis engineer.
So, following from the above, my questions are:
1. If you have experience as pipelay analysis engineer would you recommend it as a career choice (i.e. technically challenging, financially rewarding, and overall job satisfaction)?
2. If you have made a similar move yourself at some point in your career what would a present day you tell your past self? Would you recommend it or, armed with hindsight, would you continue on your previous career path?
3. Is the role so specific (i.e. essentially the same analysis day-in and day-out with the same material) that reverting back to a structural design role in the future would be a challenge (i.e. would the pipelay analysis experience stand to someone when looking for a position as a structural engineer)?
Apologies for the broad questions but wanted the opinion of someone who has experience in this role (all of the engineers I know are in the building design sector so relatively little input from that end). Thanks for your time...