Dots
Guest
Hello everyone,
I am an aeronautical engineer with three years behind in the use of the fem. the first two years I lived them in the field mainly automotive (linear/non static analysis and crash). I decided therefore to turn towards the more general mechanical design (static/modal/dynamic analysis) as the path ahead focused a lot on crash calculations, which I didn't care much about.
I then entered a metalmechanical company that produces clutches in the automotive field, where I was in fact covering a role of calculus but where, gradually, I am also taught the basics of the design 3d/2d (I will not have to be a designer though).
I have to say that after a year of work in a purely context of precision mechanics, my mind has opened more than before and I am beginning to nurture curiosity interest towards other fields of mechanics that exult from the automotive, especially because I live in lombardia and I think there is not much in the automotive field at the level of companies (in addition to brembo/streparava I do not see much present, probably for my ignorance).
As I still live and wish to continue living in lombardia, and my skills are mainly those of a calculator (fem and not only), I was wondering if there were any of you, by experience, were able to tell me which industrial sectors in this region need analysis fem (to understand, they should not only dimension using the always valid and useful traditional methods but also have to resort to detail analysis).
This would help me to get at least an idea to what sectors to look at, at least in the perspective of an immediate future (I don't know what will reserve my future).
Thank you very much for any indication you will want to give me.
I am an aeronautical engineer with three years behind in the use of the fem. the first two years I lived them in the field mainly automotive (linear/non static analysis and crash). I decided therefore to turn towards the more general mechanical design (static/modal/dynamic analysis) as the path ahead focused a lot on crash calculations, which I didn't care much about.
I then entered a metalmechanical company that produces clutches in the automotive field, where I was in fact covering a role of calculus but where, gradually, I am also taught the basics of the design 3d/2d (I will not have to be a designer though).
I have to say that after a year of work in a purely context of precision mechanics, my mind has opened more than before and I am beginning to nurture curiosity interest towards other fields of mechanics that exult from the automotive, especially because I live in lombardia and I think there is not much in the automotive field at the level of companies (in addition to brembo/streparava I do not see much present, probably for my ignorance).
As I still live and wish to continue living in lombardia, and my skills are mainly those of a calculator (fem and not only), I was wondering if there were any of you, by experience, were able to tell me which industrial sectors in this region need analysis fem (to understand, they should not only dimension using the always valid and useful traditional methods but also have to resort to detail analysis).
This would help me to get at least an idea to what sectors to look at, at least in the perspective of an immediate future (I don't know what will reserve my future).
Thank you very much for any indication you will want to give me.