this post was submitted on 15 Nov 2025
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Asklemmy
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Depends on the type of engineering. What gets you interested? Amy projects you wish you could help with?
I'm interested in electronics engineering, I would like to contribute or maybe just assemble or repair electronic products
Oh, hey, this is what I do for a living.
There's a lot of math and formulas to learn if you're designing electronics, but just doing assembly requires a lot less math. There's a lot of tools to help with the math, though, so it usually isn't too daunting. When actually doing the work, you'll need to read through a lot of documentation, like spec sheets, to design your stuff to work with their stuff. When it comes to assembly, you'll need to know a lot of rules and be able to follow drawings. You'll need to learn about electromagnetic interference and how to limit it, how to use anti-static equipment, multimeters, hipot testers, how to solder, and so on. Its a lot, but you don't usually have to do everything at once, so it is managable. Many things, like soldering, takes practice and a steady hand.
Feel free to message me if you have any specific questions!
Hello fellow electronics guy lol.
Hello! Always nice to meet electronics guys.
it's nice to see electronics people here, thanks for advices!
I'm not that good at math, but I know some basic electronics like soldering and designing a circuit or read a circuit diagram. I guess I still have a lot to study about electronics
cool stuff, but I'm not that good at math lol, anyways thanks!
Don't let math deter you. Especially if you're more interested in assembly. Most of the math I've done is related to Ohm's Law (which is just basic algebra) and its 3 phase variations. Only occasionally is it more complicated than that. And when it is more complicated, you'll have access to tools that help out.
Cool. I do both high power electronics and structural engineering, a lot of my stuff lives in harsh environments and has to run for months without anyone around to check on it.
There's a lot of cool work related to moving energy around without losing it as heat too. Most of that's in the University labs right now, but some interesting stuff has already made its way into the real world too.
All to say, there's electronics stuff you can do in an office, in a lab, or in the middle of forests. Whatever you pick won't be a bad choice, you'll evolve over the years to find the thing you're both good at and actually like doing. Good luck to you!
Asking for my friend right now who is doing Electrical Engineering, he wants to get in to power systems, what would be your advice for him?
Get experience in weird and uncommon areas of electrical engineering. The greybeard technicians, the almost bland engineer who gets put in charge of a critical project.. there's a lot of actual art to our techniques, hidden to all but those in the know. AI will never reveal these secrets as working with those guys and gals directly will.
Build projects, make a portfolio like a graphic designer might, talk is cheap but seeing is believing. Talk about your mistakes almost as much as successes, bit keep everything succinct.
thanks!