On average from first hand experience, you will work in a office for the most part. You will work with CAD programs on a regular basis, and will be in constant discussion with mechanics on the either production or design of aircraft. I'll tell you right now it can be downright boring sometimes.
An aicraft engineer cannot fly a plane. He doent study how to pilot the plane. He only studied how the mechanism of planes work.
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Typically, no. An Aerospace Engineer and Aircraft Engineer are 2 different things in the same category. An Aerospace Engineer works on designing, creating, and brainstorming ideas on airplanes, and objects that fly in the Atmosphere, and no farther than Suborbital (Aeronautical Engineer). Another thing they do is design, build and brainstorm Rockets, Orbital Spacecraft, lunar and planetary landers, Space and Deep Space Probes, and Orbital Satellites. They also have different degrees. But they all focus on aircraft.
85,000 if inexpirienced 150,000 if expirienced
the difference between aircraft maintenance engineer and aeronautical engineer is, aeronautical engineer dose the design work theoritically,while the aircraft engineer maintain and service the airplane
Michael Gregor - aircraft engineer - was born in 1888.
Michael Gregor - aircraft engineer - died in 1953.
Aeronautical engineer.
An aicraft engineer cannot fly a plane. He doent study how to pilot the plane. He only studied how the mechanism of planes work.
In aviation, a flight engineer is a member of the aircrew of an aircraft who is responsible for checking the aircraft before and after each flight, and for monitoring and operating aircraft systems during flight. The flight engineer usually has a background in aircraft maintenance and may reasonably be described as the "technical expert" member of the operating crew.
it is fun
YES
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You have to study Aeronautical Engineering.
yes, Aerospace & Mechanical Engineering share many common elements.
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