Howdy, all. I've noticed we've got a relatively large technician/engineer population here, so I figured it would be a good place to ask this question.
My background:
I'm 34. I'm a 10 year Navy vet. I was a "nuke", which is a nuclear power plant technician. My specific field was mechanical systems (Machinist Mate). In essence, we operated and maintained all mechanical systems associated with power plant operations. Our training was pretty comprehensive for operators; we were pretty well versed in nuclear reactor theory and mechanical systems theory but we did NOT use mathematics to demonstrate much of anything except for fairly simple problems (how fast can this pump fill this tank? what will this pressure gauge read if the pressure in the room is x?) We did study principles of reactor physics grounded in calculus but didn't get into the actual math (reactivity is the derivative of reactor power, etc.) We covered basic circuit theory, pump theory, basic heat transfer (mCAT), conservation of mass, conservation of energy, that kind of thing.I've heard a lot of people compare our training to a nuclear power technology degree, or what a civilian plant operator goes to school for.
At sea, I operated these systems and turned wrenches on them. We had some mechanical control systems (pressure regulating valves, pneumatically controlled valves, etc.) and some electronic ones (motor controllers, electronic water level control, etc.) that we operated. Steam turbines, heat exchangers, all manner of valves, pumps. We had to understand the principles of operation for ALL equipment but only touched mechanical ones. I got into middle-management, roughly speaking (Chief Reactor Watch), and ran a corrosion prevention program, where I managed about 10 people. We also knew emergency plant procedures and damage control.
I did my last 3 years as a recruiter. I was good and I was ethical but I am in no way interested in sales; however, I got a bunch of soft skills from that and my time at sea.
I'm currently finishing my degree in Ocean Engineering at Texas A&M. It's mainly coastal civil but it does include a fair amount of shipbuilding and mechanical systems. Probably most relevant to what I want to do is our basic electromagnetic physics, thermodynamics, dynamics, vibrations, kinematics, and maybe a few other things. I plan on taking a technical course in programmable logic controllers. I have a few small robotics-style projects I'm working on (automated planter for tomatoes). I'm interning with a robotics firm (Zapt LLC) and I'm taking tech electives with the engineering technology guys becaaaaaauuuuuse.......
I want to work in robotics; specifically small, mobile ones (not industrial) and their design. Why Ocean, then? Because I was missing a class when I applied to Mechanical and they could get me out to A&M a semester earlier (and that's the truth). As you may have surmised, I'm now trying to pile on experience and curriculum that's relevant to robotics. I have no interest in the civil aspect of Ocean.
My question, then, is what would you advise me to look for next Spring when I'm done? Am I going to be able to faithfully represent myself in a way that will get me into my desired field the first time around? What position should I expect to go into? What am I worth?