Engineers

Just to add to what everyone else is saying. I teach a LOT of ME students now and after the 2nd or 3rd day of each term I can tell which students are in the wrong major and which ones it just comes naturally to. That is not always the same as which ones do well and which ones don't...sometimes the kids who don't just "get it" work the hardest and eventually figure it out anyways.
I'll add that I already said I feel the ME degree is the best, but I don't feel an EE degree is a bad choice. The way a lot of us see it at WPI, an EE can do almost anything an ME can do, and an ME can do almost anything an EE can do...I agree that every ME should take some of the EE classes and vice versa...and I know that at a place like WPI, you can take any class you want in any major you want...you just have to make sure you sign up for it before the class list fills, there's no "permission" to take a class because you chose a different major.
Anybody looking to hire an ME/MFE (manufacturing) double major who also runs the machine shop (11 Haas CNC's and a few old manual machines), I can work with almost any CAD program you throw at me, and I can also run almost any CAM program you throw at me as well...the University thinks I know enough to teach it...but I want more money than they can afford to pay me for it.
Requardless of whatever degree you have you also have to have a true understanding of physics to a fairly good degree and a lot of common sense. Even engineering schools can not alsways teach you this as Bret says. I know tons of engineers that can not understand even some of the simpler stuff about engines and then I know several that easily understand almost all of it. Mechanical apptitude needs to be high as well as abstract reasoning if you are to ever be a true engine builder. An engineering background though is an excellent start.
a would-be engineer (or anything else for that matter) requires to be self-motivated to achieve what he/she is aiming for; engineering is a discipline that requires alot of self-motivation;
mechanical aptitude helps, some people may have to work harder at this;
and the engineering/physics degrees provide the "mental" tools to further understand what is going on, but possessing these degrees in no way makes a person an engineer... it's the mental attitude that makes a person an engineer (in addition to what was mentioned above).
$0.02
I WOULD NOT just out and take thermodynamics, you'll integrate your way into understanding a boiler.
CE, ME, EE, ect all need to be able to understand basic principles of other discipline in order to be a true engineer. To take one specific course and come out with a greater knowledge of motorsports is going to be difficult. The classes all work together and build your knowledge into understanding. You can then take that understanding and apply it to whatever you do (by the time your done w/ engineering this isn't volentary it just happens).
My vote is STATICS or Fluid Mechanics. You really need to start with statics which identifies forces and their reactions in addition to fluid mechanic which explains properties of gasses and fluids and how they act statically and dynamically.
Come on, be an engineer, You know you want to do it!!!!!!
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This is the best advise you've got so far - I would add that you need to attend Darin Morgan's next induction school, he'll help you sift through the data you learned and seperate the facts from the BS.
If you have the drive, you can accomplish anything.

I cant ever a situation arising where someone that would say "He got a 3.6 from Tennessee, but I'm not going to interview him" would say anything different if the words "Georgria tech" replaced "Tennesse." This is assume TN has some kind of decent/reputable program.

This sounds like it would be a blast if I can fit it in with work and classes
If you're curious about FSAE, go to sae.org, pick "students and competitions" then dig around in there, look at all the team websites...there's a LOT of good stuff on the net about what teams have been doing recently.
Oct. 25, 2006. 02:51 PM
SCOTT MALONE
REUTERS
BOSTON — Injecting small quantities of ethanol into car engines at moments of peak demand — such as accelerating sharply or climbing a steep hill — could improve the fuel economy of gasoline engines by 20 per cent to 30 per cent, a scientist said Wednesday.
A team of researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is working on the system, which scientists say would allow carmakers to use smaller engines in their vehicles, reducing weight and improving fuel economy at a lower cost to consumers than by adding a hybrid engine.
"To have a big impact on reducing oil consumption, one needs a low-cost way of improving efficiency, so a lot of people buy the car," said Daniel Cohn, senior research scientist at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
He estimated that adding the ethanol injection system to a car would cost about 1,000 and that cars using the new system could be in mass production by 2011.
"We view it as a very important near-term way to reduce oil consumption," Cohn said.
Volatile U.S. retail gasoline prices — which hit a record high above $3 (figures U.S.) per gallon this summer but have since eased to around $2.20 per gallon — have piqued consumer interest in fuel-efficient cars.
"It's crucial that the internal combustion engine, whether it's gasoline or advanced diesel, is improved to the point where those improvements are meaningful," said Ron Cogan, editor of the Green Car Journal, a quarterly magazine focused on alternative powertrains.
Much attention has focused on hybrid cars, such as Toyota Motor Corp.'s Prius, which couple an electric motor with a traditional gasoline engine to improve fuel efficiency. But they are pricey — hybrid engines can add $3,000 or more to a car's cost — and account for just about 1 percent of new car sales in the United States.
How It Works
The U.S's Big Three Detroit automakers — General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and the Chrysler unit of DaimlerChrysler AG — as well as the White House have backed the adoption of cars that can burn the 85 per cent ethanol-15 per cent gasoline blended fuel known as E-85 as an alternative to pure gasoline, which is made from petroleum.
But the limited supply of ethanol, which is made from plant matter, limits its usefulness as a primary fuel source. There are only 900 pumping stations nationwide that sell E-85.
The MIT scientists' plan gets around the ethanol supply issue by using small amounts of it — so little that Cohn estimated the ethanol tank in cars using the technology would need to be refilled every three months or so.
A turbocharger is added to produce more power. The ethanol injection system with the turbocharger would give a driver more power than a conventional engine of the same size.
The higher pressures and temperatures of a turbocharged engine can lead to a problem known as knock, which occurs when the fuel and air in the engine explode prematurely, hurting performance and potentially damaging the engine.
Cohn said his group's technology avoids that problem by injecting ethanol into the engine when knock is likely to occur. The ethanol vaporizes and cools the fuel-air mixture, keeping it from exploding until the engine is ready.
"This is a very special feature of ethanol," Cohn said.
Understanding air flow is probably best learned in fluids class, have fun i hated that course.





