this sounds like a plan, but what advice would anyone who has been there and got the tee-shirt have, it is a minefield out there and a small amount information could go along way.
i would be so very very great full for all advice
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+1autogyro wrote:You might not like this but here goes.
Go and do some motor racing.
Your academic and professional career will take many twists and turns. Early on, you'll want to make sure you have as many avenues available to you as possible. As you get deeper into things, you'll find out what you enjoy and what is important to you. Only then would I worry about specializing in any particular field. I don't write this to discourage you, in fact I am encouraging you to pursue it if you feel it is worthwhile, but do realize that Newey and others didn't get to where they are right out of college. They performed other jobs, probably even unrelated to F1 before they got to where they are. I would also suggest if you want to eventually work at a top level of design, that you pursue classes, or maybe even a minor or Master's specialization, in systems engineering and optimization. That is the responsibility of the high level F1 designers, anyway.Jersey Tom wrote:Your perspective on life changes a hell of a lot between being 18 and 22 or 23. Racing as a hobby is one thing. Career is another.
Are those 100$/h the costs for the company or the payment the employee receives?riff_raff wrote:Here in the US, $100/hr is a reasonable contractor rate for an experienced automotive class A surfacer. Your typical $50/hr CAD jockey cannot produce class A surfacing.
Yea now I noticed that there is a special module called automotive class A.riff_raff wrote: CATIA V5 is the CAD software used by most of the world's automotive OEM's. CATIA Generative Shape Design (GSD) is the base level surfacing module, and is not a Class A tool. CATIA V5 Class A tool is Vehicle Design/Styling & Class A.