I got out of the Navy to go to school for Petroleum Engineering but I keep coming back to Aerospace for a number of reasons. I also just enlisted in the Air Force Reserve as a Space Systems Operator. Just looking for some insight into the field.
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I got out of the Navy to go to school for Petroleum Engineering but I keep coming back to Aerospace for a number of reasons. I also just enlisted in the Air Force Reserve as a Space Systems Operator. Just looking for some insight into the field.
I'm in the industry as well. If I can answer any questions for feel free to PM me.
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Do you get to wear the 30" zipper too?
I did Aerospace Engineering for 1 year at CU Boulder. Not what I expected. The "glory" of aerospace engineering died along time ago. Aerospace engineering is nothing more than a un glorified mechanical engineering degree and a bureaucracy. If you are smart enough to be an engineer you are better spending your smarts on something that is more demanded in industry. The other thing I realized and yes this view sucks, but if there are no war's there is no defense spending. I would stick to Petroleum Engineering or change to Chemical. I work in oil and gas right now. Even though the price of oil is down there are still plenty of good engineering jobs in the oil and gas industry.
If you want to really go into space system I would recommended electrical engineering (which is 1 of my degrees), computer science, or applied physics. These can still get you into space systems but even if you decide not to go this route you can move to another industry very easily.
Did my time. About 12 years in the 80's and 90's. Lots of travel to places that were either too cold (Minot AFB) or too hot (Nellis) whenever I was there to fix a particular problem. The excitement wears off quickly unless you're addicted to coach class travel and so-so restaurant food.
I was in engineering. Some other field might be very different.
Personally, I hated the bags. Amazing fabric that was wouldn't breathe worth a damn in the Florida summer but let every little breeze through in Virginia or Colorado winters. I wore them because it was expected of me as a "space operator" but I'd just as soon wear my Class Bs or BDUs.