1 tom rebold, msee introduction to engineering tom rebold, msee former jpl telecom engineer...
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Tom Rebold, MSEEFormer JPL Telecom Engineer
trebold@mpc.edu
Welcome to Welcome to ENGR1ENGR1
http://www.mpcfaculty.net/tom_reboldhttp://www.mpcfaculty.net/tom_rebold
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
AGENDAAGENDA
Class Overview Speaker/Tour selection Introductions/Survey What is Engineering? Mars EDL Video Mars Rover Competition
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Class OverviewClass Overview
This class is intended to:• Show you what it’s like to be an engineer
• Expose you to many aspects/fields of engineering
• Challenge you with real engineering problems
• Support your education and career success
• Instill a sense of professionalism
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Class ContentClass Content Readings from textbook Visiting speakers Site Tours and college open houses Craft-stick Bridge competition Lots of Engineering Videos (see
syllabus) Weekly assignments 3 Quizzes Final Design Competition (or exam)
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Possible SpeakersPossible Speakers
Kevin Gilman, former MPC, ME CalPoly, Chief Engineer, Lansmont
Tad Masek, former CSUMB, ME, Light and Motion, NPS
Dennis Jones, MechEngr, HVAC, Plumbing/Fire, Engergy compliance
Martin Hollman, http://www.aircraftdesigns.com/index.html
R. Wayne Johnson, Architect/Civil Engineer Steven Jacobs, SJAutomation, Commercial
Robotics
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Possible ToursPossible Tours
Light and Motion Bestor Engineering MBARI Granite Construction (Watsonville) Lansmont Corp SJ Automation (Marina)
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
My Career—an OverviewMy Career—an Overview
MIT 1987, BS & MS in EECS ’83-’87 Research Assistant, Lincoln Labs ’87 JPL Deep Space Network, System Engr ’93 Radio Science Data Analyst ’97 CommTech, McMurdo, Antarctica ’98 Satellite Telecom Engineer ’00 MPC CSIS and Engineering Instructor
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
““My other car is on My other car is on Mars”Mars”
Driving a robot on another planet
(and other detours in Engineering)
Tom Rebold, Monterey Peninsula College
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
How do you get a cool How do you get a cool job?job?
It starts at your age• What are your dreams?
• Who are your role models?
• The mind makes real what it dwells on most
Me:
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
MIT: A drink from the firehoseMIT: A drink from the firehose
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
My First Job: My First Job: The Deep Space NetworkThe Deep Space Network
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
May ‘97: YucatanMay ‘97: Yucatan
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
June/July 1997: June/July 1997: The Pathfinder LandingThe Pathfinder Landing
Pathfinder 360 Fish Eye
Donna ShirleyRover Manager
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Pathfinder EntrySignal Reception
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
September ‘97: Off to AntarcticaSeptember ‘97: Off to Antarctica
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
March ’98 March ’98 Needing a change…Needing a change…
29 Palms29 PalmsSea Dragon Field Sea Dragon Field ExerciseExercise
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Words of WisdomWords of Wisdom
You all have unknown talents Stay balanced! Happiness is when you find
them and give them to others You will create your own future!
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What is Engineering?What is Engineering?
Two Types of Definitions• Career Based• Functional
Career Description• Engineering is a CAREER and a
PROFESSION– Requires Special Education, Training, and
Experience For a Working Lifetime of Practice– Not Quite Analogous to Physicians & Attorneys
License NOT required to Practice in Most Cases
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What is Engineering?What is Engineering?Cont.1Cont.1
Best “Professional” Analogy → Certified Public Accountant (CPA)
Licenses Granted by States • Must Meet Strict Educational, Practice, and
Testing Criteria to Earn the Professional Engineer (P.E.) Title
Currently 2x106 Engineers in the USA• About 18% Hold Professional Licenses
http://www.dca.ca.gov/pels/sunset/98sunset.pdf 01/22/99
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
P.E. ExclusivesP.E. Exclusives
Some Engineering Functions can NOT be done by UnLicensed Engineers• MOST Civil Engineering Designs MUST be
“Signed Off” or “Stamped” by a Registered, Professional Engineer
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What is Engineering?What is Engineering?Cont.2Cont.2
Functional Description:• Short Answer = Technical Problem Solving
– The Output of ALL Engineering isThe Solution to a Practical ProblemFulfillment of a Practical Need
• Long Answer = Practical-Problem Solving Through the Application of the Quantitative (Number-Based) Disciplines– Mathematics
– Sciences; e.g., Physics, Chemistry, Biology
– Empiricism (Experiments and Tests)
Problem Solving
PROBLEMTYPES
NECESSARYPEREQUISITES STRATEGY
(STEPS)
ELEMENTS(ABILITY TO)
HEURISTICS (HINTS)
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Engineering FieldsEngineering Fields
Let’s Make a WhiteBoardList of the Types of Engineers•
•
•
•
•
•
•
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What do Engineers Do?What do Engineers Do?
Dozens of Branches of Engineering; The Major Disciplines include:
Civil Engineering (CE)• typical Products = Bridges, Buildings,
Roadways, Water Systems
Chemical Engineering (ChemE)• typical Products =
Oil & Gas Refineries
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What Do Engineers Do?What Do Engineers Do?Cont.1 Cont.1
Electrical/Electronic Engineering (EE)• typical Products =
– Integrated Circuits (“computer chips”)
– Electricity Distribution (“PG&E”)
Industrial/Manufact. Engineering (IE)• typical Products = Efficient Factories
Materials Science & Engineering (MSE)• typical Products = High Performance
Metals, Ceramics, Composites (graphite)
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What Do Engineers Do?What Do Engineers Do?Cont.2Cont.2
Computer (Science) Engineering (CS)• typical Products = Software Code
Mechanical Engineering (ME)• typical Products =
– Machinery (automobiles, pumps, mach-tools)
– Heat & Fluid-Flow Distribution (“HVAC”)
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What Do Engineers Do?What Do Engineers Do?Cont.3Cont.3
BioEngineering – a NEW Discipline“…. a discipline that advances knowledge in engineering, biology and medicine, and improves human health through cross-disciplinary activities that integrate the engineering sciences with the biomedical sciences and clinical (medical) practice”
- Whitaker Foundation
• Some Typical Products– Biomaterials/Tissue Engineering
– Biomedical Electronics & Imaging
– Biomechanics
M0
M2
M1
M3
M6
M5
M4
M7
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Engineering vs. ScienceEngineering vs. Science
Let’s Make a WhiteBoardList of the Differences•
•
•
•
•
•
•
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Engineering vs. ScienceEngineering vs. Science
Engineering is Closely Related to Science & Math, but it is NOT the SAME
Scientists seek to UNDERSTAND WHAT IS, while Engineers seek to CREATE THAT WHICH
NEVER WAS- Theodore von Kármán, CalTech
Professor, and the Father of Modern AeroSpace Engineering
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What is COOL about Engineering?What is COOL about Engineering?
Solving Challenging Problems Opportunity to DESIGN, BUILD, and
TEST Products that People Really Use• Engineering is a CREATIVE endeavor
– The Root of the Word “Engineer” is Ingenium; Not Engine
Chance to Learn New Things• Engineering is about Progress; an
Engineer’s Knowledge & Skills progress as well
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What is COOL about Engineering?What is COOL about Engineering?Cont.1Cont.1
Working with People• That’s Right; Not all Engineers are “Nerds”
• Complex Technology Must Be Made Useful to the Non-Technical Person
• Engineers, aside from applied Math/Sci, manage Projects and Organizations– Technical Projects can require the Input of Many
People. Project Engineers Manage Activities toEnsure the Project Meets Technical RequirementsStay on the Time-ScheduleStay within the $-Cost-Budget
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What is COOL about Engineering?What is COOL about Engineering? Publishing Technical Papers
• Thousands of Engineering/Technical Journals Publish Results of Engineer’s Analyses, Designs, Experiments
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What is COOL about Engineering?What is COOL about Engineering?Cont.2Cont.2
Earning Patents• Earning A Patent Requires the
Advancement of a Practical Art; This is what Engineers do
USA Constitution, Article 1, Section 8 (Powers Granted to Congress):
Clause 8: To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
What is COOL about Engineering?What is COOL about Engineering?Cont.2Cont.2
Engage in Professional Activities• Attend/Present-At Technical Conferences• Attend Trade-Shows• Society Membership (ASCE, IEEE, ASME)
See the World – Engineers often Travel• Special Knowledge/Skills Can often ONLY
be Transmitted In-Person– Promote/Explain Product to Customers– Install Product, Train Users -Site Product-Testing
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
The Bottom LineThe Bottom Line
There are VERY FEW Academic Disciplines Where One Can Move Into PRIVATE INDUSTRY with A Bachelor of Science (4yr) Degree• TWO Primary Categories
– Engineering
– Business
• Difficult for Most Liberal Arts Disciplines
• Somewhat Easier for the Sciences
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
NACE (NationWide) Bachelor's New-Grad Salary • 2004
27.8
31.233.0
36.037.4
40.6 41.0 41.1 42.0
48.7 49.1 49.9
52.6 53.1
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
Psych EnglLit PolySci Mktg Mngt Finance CE MIS/DP Accntg CS ME EE ChemE CompE
Field of Study
AV
ER
AG
E S
tart
ing
Sa
lary
($
k/yr
)
file = Salary-Survey-2004_0503.xls NACE = National Association of Colleges and Employers
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Cal-Poly Bachelor's New-Grad Salary by College • 2004
54.04
41.60
40.20
38.00
35.50
34.00
32.00
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
EN
GR
BU
SA
RC
HE
DU
CS
ci&
Mat
hA
GR
ILi
bArt
s
Co
lleg
e
MEDIAN Starting Salary ($k/yr)file = Salary-Survey-2004_0503.xls
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Job (dis)SatisfactionJob (dis)Satisfaction Satisfaction
Factors1. Challenging work
assignments 2. Work environment
and colleagues 3. Constantly
changing technology
4. Good compensation
5. Good job security
DISsatifaction Factors1. Too much
nonengineering work
2. Lack of support from management
3. Uncertainty in job market
4. Poor compensation 5. No potential for
advancement
2004 National Survey of Mechanical Design Engrs
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Engineering is Fun (Really...Engineering is Fun (Really...☺)☺) An overwhelming majority of survey takers,
91%, feel that engineering is FUN. Their reasons include the chance to tackle challenging problems and something different every day. • "I like solving problems, being the hero."• "I get paid to break things."• "So many challenges! New stuff to play with
around every corner."• "I love proving others wrong."• "I'm like a kid in a candy shop.“• “Engineering Rocks”
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Robots at Monterey Robots at Monterey Peninsula CollegePeninsula College
MAST 296.6 ROV Competition
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
ENGR 50 RoboticsENGR 50 Robotics
1 Unit Class Starts Friday! 345-6PM for 12 weeks
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
A Simulated Mars Rover
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
Mars Sequencing Team (You)Mars Sequencing Team (You)
Develop a sequence to take Rover to visit a rock (or three)
Five tries (1 per “Sol”)
Your Command Sequence is made of Letters: FFrBbRFfLlFLFQ
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to Engineering
SequenceSequence Key:Key: f = 2 inches forward b = 2 inches backward l = 20 – 30 degrees left r = 20 – 30 degress right F = 10 – 12 inches forward B = 10 – 12 inches backward L = 80 – 100 degrees left R = 80 – 100 degrees right
All measurements are approximate!
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Tom Rebold, MSEEIntroduction to EngineeringHappy Driving!Happy Driving!
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