LearnerN
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 9, 2010
- 102
Hello, all. I recently learned that I passed the civil PE exam (geotechnical option). I work mostly in mechanical design of oil/gas pipelines, but since my degree is in civil engineering, I do some civil engineering for my company as well.
As a brand new civil PE, one question that has puzzled me is: what is the role of a civil PE in doing civil engineering design in general? Obviously the PE exam shows I'm competent in general civil engineering, and then also in the specialty area of the test I did. So would it be appropriate for, say, a civil PE to stamp/approve drawings for any sort of general civil engineering design so long as the engineer understands and is comfortable with the design? Meaning, as a civil PE who passed the geotech exam, if I need to design some simple footings and I believe I'm doing the design right and understand what I'm doing, is it appropriate for me to be able to stamp the plans?
Any input would be appreciated as I figure out my new role as a licensed civil engineer.
As a brand new civil PE, one question that has puzzled me is: what is the role of a civil PE in doing civil engineering design in general? Obviously the PE exam shows I'm competent in general civil engineering, and then also in the specialty area of the test I did. So would it be appropriate for, say, a civil PE to stamp/approve drawings for any sort of general civil engineering design so long as the engineer understands and is comfortable with the design? Meaning, as a civil PE who passed the geotech exam, if I need to design some simple footings and I believe I'm doing the design right and understand what I'm doing, is it appropriate for me to be able to stamp the plans?
Any input would be appreciated as I figure out my new role as a licensed civil engineer.