frusso110
Mechanical
- Feb 2, 2012
- 67
Hi everyone,
I'm a relatively new mechanical engineer (graduated college in 2008). I used to work for one of the largest DoD contractors in the USA, but last February switched to a new, small company.
This new company does things very unprofessionally compared to what I'm used to. My first day, my co-worker said "this isn't a professional company." After 9 months, I tend to agree. I've been working hard to improve the way things are done, but it feels like i'm losing an uphill battle.
One of these things is assembly drawings. I was taught very strictly that mechanical engineering drawings describe WHAT is to be done, but should rarely specify HOW it is to be accomplished. Quite frankly, if I had to inform manufacturing the order in which to assemble each screw... Well... Yeah.
Manufacturing is insisting that engineering put this information on the assembly drawings, which I am firmly against. I wouldn't mind it as much if engineering was treated with respect at this company, but we are not. Everything is always engineering's fault no matter what. I'm not sure of a way out of this, or what to do. I already spend my more than 75% of my time doing secretarial tasks instead of engineering. I'm not sure if I can keep my sanity unless someone gives me some real engineering to do instead of mindlessness.
I'm completing my M.S. at night - looking forward to moving on when its done.
Thanks
I'm a relatively new mechanical engineer (graduated college in 2008). I used to work for one of the largest DoD contractors in the USA, but last February switched to a new, small company.
This new company does things very unprofessionally compared to what I'm used to. My first day, my co-worker said "this isn't a professional company." After 9 months, I tend to agree. I've been working hard to improve the way things are done, but it feels like i'm losing an uphill battle.
One of these things is assembly drawings. I was taught very strictly that mechanical engineering drawings describe WHAT is to be done, but should rarely specify HOW it is to be accomplished. Quite frankly, if I had to inform manufacturing the order in which to assemble each screw... Well... Yeah.
Manufacturing is insisting that engineering put this information on the assembly drawings, which I am firmly against. I wouldn't mind it as much if engineering was treated with respect at this company, but we are not. Everything is always engineering's fault no matter what. I'm not sure of a way out of this, or what to do. I already spend my more than 75% of my time doing secretarial tasks instead of engineering. I'm not sure if I can keep my sanity unless someone gives me some real engineering to do instead of mindlessness.
I'm completing my M.S. at night - looking forward to moving on when its done.
Thanks