Be the Engineer of your career

This issue of the CADDZOOM, we continue our “Be the engineer of your career” series by taking an in-depth look into civil engineering.

Engineering is one of the oldest professions in the world. Around 2550 BC, Imhotep, the first documented engineer, built the famous stepped pyramid of King Zoser, located at Saqqarah. Ancient monuments like the pyramids still hold their sway over modern Civil Engineering.

Today too, engineers continue to revolutionize the world. It is for this reason that engineers must be encouraged to stay true to their passions. A deeper insight into the different streams of engineering helps aspiring engineers remain inspired.

Civil Engineering – creating the world!

“You can’t have civilization without civil engineering.”

Civilization relies on teams of inventive people to design, build and maintain sophisticated infrastructure that surround us. It is this group of inventive people who are known as civil engineers. One cannot think of a society whose foundations haven’t been laid by civil engineers. The influence of civil engineering in our life is tremendous: from our water delivery system at our homes to the road networks that we use for transportation, civil engineering can positively impact the quality of our life. Civil engineering is the oldest of the engineering disciplines. The first engineering school, the National School of Bridges and Highways, was opened in 1747 in France.

What do civil engineers do?

Civil engineers are responsible for designing, building and maintaining all types of structures. The wide range of civil structures includes water-supply and sewer systems, railroads and highways, and planned cities. Civil engineering, therefore, comprises of various subfields such as environmental engineering, geotechnical engineering, geophysics, geodesy, control engineering, structural engineering, biomechanics, nanotechnology, transportation engineering, earth science, atmospheric sciences, forensic engineering, municipal or urban engineering, water resources engineering, materials engineering, coastal engineering, surveying, and construction engineering.

Reference: www.whatiscivilengineering.csce.ca

Falkirk Wheel – A marvel of Civil Engineering!

Falkirk Wheel   – A marvel of Civil Engineering!

The Falkirk Wheel, located in Scotland, is truly an engineering marvel, presented to the world by Civil Engineers. To put it simply – the Falkirk Wheel allows boats to fly. It was built to connect two different canals, providing a way for boats to travel without a natural waterway. The Falkirk Wheel connects two canals with a height difference of 35 meters.

The Falkirk Wheel is built around a central wheel that comprises of two opposing arms revolving around a central axle. Each of these arms is fitted with diametrically opposing caissons. A caisson in geotechnical engineering is a watertight chamber used to carry out construction work underwater. The caissons installed in the Falkirk Wheel works in the opposite manner, the water is retained inside the caisson instead of being excluded. It was for this reason that the Falkirk Wheel’s caissons are also called Gondolas.

The caisson works on the Archimedes principle. The weight of the caissons is always maintained at 600 tons, whether the caisson is carrying just water or a boat. When the boat enters the caisson the weight of the water displaced is equal to the weight of the boat, allowing it to float. The caissons are rotated in the same speed as the wheel but in the opposite direction this ensures that caissons are always at level. The caissons lead the boat to an aqueduct which leads the boat to the next canal. An aqueduct is an artificially constructed watercourse to transport water

Reference: www.falkirk-wheel.com

Civil Engineering today

The Civil Engineers today continue to accelerate the progress in the world. A report published by the Institution of Civil Engineers takes a look into the areas where civil engineers can contribute to the most.

Areas influenced by Civil Engineering:

Civil Engineers help support life :Civil Engineers bring about the supply of fresh water to all parts of the world thereby increasing quality of life. An illustration: In Ethiopia, only 24% of the country’s 62.6 million people have safe water and only 15% have sanitation. Water-related diseases are common and life expectancy is only 43 years. Civil engineers designed the Hitosa gravity water scheme, a part of Ethiopia’s largest water-supply project. Civil engineers had the vision needed to design and put into practice such a huge scheme, working with 60,000 local people to provide safe water for their communities.

Civil Engineers protect us from natural disasters :Natural disasters are managed better when understanding of the environment is applied to real time situations. This is especially true in coastal areas that are threatened by being worn away by the sea or floods, and inland sites may be contaminated by previous industrial activities or threatened by subsidence (an area of land gradually sinking or caving in). Extreme heat and cold, winds, earthquakes and risk of flooding cause problems, but civil engineers are using their skills to make areas safer. ‘Superadobe’ is a beehive-like building developed for future communities on the Moon. It has been adapted to create affordable emergency housing for survivors of disasters like the Asian tsunami.

Civil Engineers help us get from point A to point B :Transport systems join our communities together. Road, rail, air and sea networks span the world. They help us trade, travel, exchange ideas and information, and gain employment, healthcare and education. Civil engineers understand the best ways to move around or across our environment, creating the networks that help take us where we want to go.

The Green Wheel is an excellent example of civil engineering’s contribution to transportation. Opened in 2002, it is an 80km network of footpaths and cycle ways around Peterborough, UK, that encourages ‘green travel’ and sustainable tourism. It includes a series of bridges to carry horses, people on foot and cycles over roads, railways and rivers. The bridges link nature reserves, picnic sites, sculpture trails and small parks, helping local people and visitors to get more enjoyment out of the area.

Civil Engineering with Modern Tools

Today, the civil engineer is equipped with several tools to make his task easy. One such example is Revit – a BIM software.

Revit comes with loads of unique features to help designers and architects design more sustainable, accurate designs with fewer errors and less waste, thus achieve higher profits and more satisfied clients. Some of the features that make Revit Architecture irresistible include:

Analysis: Revit is used to create and capture photo realistic design ideas and contextual environments. It lets the users to capture and analyze design concepts and enables them to take right decisions for sustainable design, clash detection, construction planning, and fabrication.

User friendliness: Users can sketch freely, and create 3D forms quickly, and manipulate forms interactively. The users can prepare their models for fabrication and construction with built in tools for conception and clarification of complex forms.

Manufacturing viability: Engineers and architects can perform daylighting and energy analysis, and gain insights into manufacturing viability and early construction material takeoffs.

Collaboration: It helps them collaborate with engineers, contractors, and owners. Using Revit, engineers and architects can optimize team collaboration, communicate more clearly and reliably the design intent to all stakeholders, including fabricators.

Interoperability: Engineers and architects can bring conceptual massing concepts from applications such as AutoCAD and Autodesk, Maya as well as Auto DesSys form.Z, McNeel Rhioceros, Google Sketchup, or other ACIS or NURBS based applications into Revit Architecture as mass objects, and begin schematic design.

Reference: www.ice.org.uk

Listen to Experts

All guidance is incomplete without the advice of experts. An accurate grip of any subject is only possible if theoretical knowledge is met with practical examples. It’s for that reason that we set up an interview for you with a leading mechanical engineer.

Meet Mr. K. Vishwanathan, Chairman and Managing Director CADD Centre Software Solutions. The world of CADD is his home ground. Mr. Vishwanathan’s insight is valuable because of his 24 years of experience in the world of CAD and has exhaustive knowledge of the same. He began his career as a CADD Trainer and today is the Chairman and Managing Director CADD Centre Software Solutions. He is also certified AMIE – Mechanical, The Associate Member of the Institution of Engineers (AMIE) is a professional certification given by Institution of Engineers (India).

This is an excerpt of the interview, more at www.caddcentre.ws/caddPlanCareer.php

  1. How is the field of mechanical engineering different from the other engineering streams?

Mechanical engineering in reality is comprehensive and there is no one other area of engineering which is complete without manufacturing. Mechanical engineering involves shorter product life cycles, as compared to civil and structural aspects referred to as infrastructure.

  1. What are the challenges a mechanical engineer faces, especially at the start of his/her career?

Common issue would be where to start and how to start. With a good blend of knowledge and right skills one could visibly see opportunities to begin and build a strong career. Engineers have to master the entire engineering process “Concept to Reality”, “Art to Part” and how to sell (their ideas) as well.

  1. What are the qualities the industry looks for in a budding engineer?

In addition to the knowledge and skill sets, industry constantly looks for curiosity, imagination, communication and sense of responsibility. Functional exposure and the flair to understand newer trends in technology and quickly adapt to them are equally vital as well.

  1. How can a mechanical engineer set himself/herself apart from his/her competition?

Acquiring thorough knowledge right from first principles is vital. By acquiring unique skills on the most recent technologies from CADD Centre, mechanical engineer can set himself apart.

Be the Engineer of your Career

Dream a unique engineering dream!

Engineering remains a profession many aspire to. It is truly a professional’s profession, but even this noble profession has recently lost its luster. This is mainly because students are not staying true to their passions but following the crowd in pursuing careers in fields distant from their passions.

To use an illustration, Jethro Tull –studied to be a lawyer but he ended up inventing the seed drill, a mechanical instrument that revolutionized agriculture. The trend today seems to be the opposite. We follow our passions into college – take up specialized courses but when it comes to choosing our careers, we bury our passions and follow the crowd.

CADDZOOM is carrying a series that takes a more in-depth look into the various engineering streams. We kick start this series with Mechanical Engineering.

Mechanical Engineering: inventing leverage!

Mechanical engineering, using principles of heat and mechanical power, designs, produces, and maintains mechanical systems. Mechanical engineers design and manufacture everything from small individual parts and devices (e.g., microscale sensors and inkjet printer nozzles) to large systems (e.g., spacecraft and machine tools). The sub disciplines of mechanical engineering include structural analysis, mechatronics and robotics, design and drafting, etc. Mechanical engineering emerged as a full-fledged stream during the industrial revolution.

However the mechanical engineering legacy starts with the simple machines. The six simple machines are: Lever, Wheel and Axel, Pulley, Inclined Plane, Wedge, Screw. A simple machine is an elementary device that has a specific movement (mechanism) providing a mechanical advantage. The invention of the wheel has been attributed as the invention, that changed the face of technology – its inventor can be regarded as the first mechanical engineer. Can you imagine what would have happened if he too had just gone with the flow? If farming was the trend then, the inventor of the wheel would have just gone on pulling the plough himself. The wheel wouldn’t have been invented!

Ferris wheel!

The Ferris wheel has brought joy to numerous fans since day one. The abandonment and freedom that a Ferris wheel provides, was possible only because George Ferris remained true to his design and passions. In response to a challenge to create a monument to outdo The Eiffel tower, at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Ferris responded with a proposed wheel from which visitors would be able to view the entire exhibition. The planners feared his design for a rotating wheel towering over the grounds could not possibly be safe. Ferris persisted. He returned in a few weeks with several respectable endorsements from established engineers, and the committee agreed to allow construction to begin, also recruited several local investors to cover the $400,000 cost of construction. The Ferris wheel thus stands as a testament to a mechanical engineer’s passions.