Dear Civil Engineering Community,
I have approached my professional career in an unorthodox way. I obtained my degree in Mechanical Engineering and found a job doing structural building engineering in Indiana. In Indiana, we are not discipline specific, so I sat for and passed the 16 hour SE exam to obtain my Indiana "PE" license. I have no Civil background, but need to obtain my Civil license for comity to certain (mainly west coast) states. I will obtain my S.E. license in IL because I have passed the SE exam and there are no PE prerequisites. However, with just the SE exam being passed, I cannot get either a PE or SE in, for example, CA via comity.
So my question. What do you suggest for learning material based on a structural background? I'm hoping for an answer such that the study package from PPI and the CERM will suffice, but I honestly don't know. I'm pretty much clueless on the other topics of the PE exam other than structural. Can I rely heavily on my structural knowledge to pass this exam?
I have approached my professional career in an unorthodox way. I obtained my degree in Mechanical Engineering and found a job doing structural building engineering in Indiana. In Indiana, we are not discipline specific, so I sat for and passed the 16 hour SE exam to obtain my Indiana "PE" license. I have no Civil background, but need to obtain my Civil license for comity to certain (mainly west coast) states. I will obtain my S.E. license in IL because I have passed the SE exam and there are no PE prerequisites. However, with just the SE exam being passed, I cannot get either a PE or SE in, for example, CA via comity.
So my question. What do you suggest for learning material based on a structural background? I'm hoping for an answer such that the study package from PPI and the CERM will suffice, but I honestly don't know. I'm pretty much clueless on the other topics of the PE exam other than structural. Can I rely heavily on my structural knowledge to pass this exam?