mTreadwell
Mechanical
- Sep 3, 2008
- 6
I'm a mechanical engineer a couple of years out of school. I design and specify weldments from time to time as part of my work, but my only training with welds so far comes from on-the-job learning. Sidebar - why don't they cover the practical stuff in school? I feel like a welding course and a machining course would have made me about 10000% more useful when I started. My school had some options for this but there were limited seats and I couldn't fit them into my schedule.
Anyway, one of our senior engineers has mentioned a "welding for engineers" course he's been meaning to take, but I can't find any such thing offered by AWS or the local welding schools.
I've considered taking a basic introductory welding course but really I'm more interested in something a little bit higher-level - besides reviewing things like symbols and conventions, maybe some detail about compatibility of metals, basic weld technology, conventions and best practices for designing / specifying welds, AWS vs ISO/DIN... I know that's all over the place, I'm just trying to come up with topics that might be useful in such a course.
I found links to in previous discussions here; the non-welder course sounds like the right kind of thing but maybe a little lacking in technical depth. Can anyone suggest other courses or resources (welding for dummies?) that might be useful? Bonus points for something that's offered in the Baltimore area...
Cheers,
-Mark
Anyway, one of our senior engineers has mentioned a "welding for engineers" course he's been meaning to take, but I can't find any such thing offered by AWS or the local welding schools.
I've considered taking a basic introductory welding course but really I'm more interested in something a little bit higher-level - besides reviewing things like symbols and conventions, maybe some detail about compatibility of metals, basic weld technology, conventions and best practices for designing / specifying welds, AWS vs ISO/DIN... I know that's all over the place, I'm just trying to come up with topics that might be useful in such a course.
I found links to in previous discussions here; the non-welder course sounds like the right kind of thing but maybe a little lacking in technical depth. Can anyone suggest other courses or resources (welding for dummies?) that might be useful? Bonus points for something that's offered in the Baltimore area...
Cheers,
-Mark