Elinwood:
From an older fellow....
Go to the library and take a look at some old “Sweets Catalogs” and “Thomas Registers” on products and services. Get yourself a few general purpose catalogs from companies like McMasters. They are a real education in themselves. The hard copies are much more satisfying to us older guys, at least this one, but I’m sure most of this stuff is on the internet now too. You can Google any subject, topic, product, construction material, structural system and start looking for variations on a theme and suppliers. Don’t be afraid to call them, many of them do still try to be helpful. But, have a list of a few intelligent questions, so they are forced to, or want to, switch you to one of the more experienced engineering reps., not just the sales types, or to their cheaper help, with no more experience than you have. When you get the receptionist, and only ask for the catalog, you’ll likely get the 5 page version of who we are and what we sell, without much good engineering info. Don’t be afraid to admit that you are young, starting out, and want to learn to understand their products or systems, etc. But, you have to show a little knowledge and interest to get the good stuff.
Talk to older engineers in your company or community and ask them what materials they would suggest, or share, or even better, would they be your mentor. Is your company starting from scratch, yesterday, that nobody has any earlier plans to look at? Again, another engineer out in the community or at an ASCE, NSPE, AISC, AWS, ACI, etc. meeting might be of help here too. I think you will find that older catalogs have much more meaningful design and product info. in them, from which you can learn and gain valuable insight, if you can get your hand on them. They may not exactly comply with today’s codes, that you do have to interpolate, but they will give you more meaningful design reasoning and product info. than the newer catalogs, which seem to have become tabulations from which you pick a product, part or size, without gaining much real engineering knowledge.