Ok this is the situation...i used to work for an electrical contractor that do design build projects...there is no engineers in house the only engineer was me when i was an eit...the owner has an electrical contractor licence...when we design a project we contacted an engineer that knew the owners for a long time to review and stamp the drawings...i dont know how much he charge...now that i am a pe...how much do i charge for the drawings since i am replacing his place...so is not like stamping drawings for some one i dont know is for the company i gain the experience tobe a pe...and i know we make good designs. (null)
I view this thread as 'Wildsoldier PE' used to be an employee, but is no longer an active employee. He wants to know if it is OK to stamp the drawing because he is familar with the company's work in the past.I viewed the thread as his company used to hire someone else to stamp drawings and now wants HIM (an employee of said company) to stamp the drawings. The first is illegal the second is not.
Sounds like he should make you a partner.I find this thread to be troublesome...maybe the laws in your state are different, but in Texas here is what it says...
§137.33 Sealing Procedures
(a) The purpose of the engineer’s seal is to assure the user of the engineering product that the work has been performed or directly supervised by the professional engineer named and to delineate the scope of the engineer’s work.
( b ) License holders shall only seal work done by them, performed under their direct supervision as defined in §131.81 of this title, relating to Definitions, or shall be standards or general guideline specifications that they have reviewed and selected. Upon sealing, engineers take full professional responsibility for that work.
From §131.81 Direct supervision - The control over and detailed professional knowledge of the work prepared under the engineer's supervision. The degree of control should be such that the engineer personally makes engineering decisions or personally reviews and approves proposed decisions prior to their implementation. The engineer must have control over the decisions either through physical presence or the use of communications devices.
So unless you basically re-design all of the work, or directly oversee whoever did the work, you cannot seal the plans...in Texas, at least.
If you are sealing documents that were done under your direct supervision, or that you designed yourself for your employer...I would think that would be part of your duties as a PE for the firm. Selling your seal by the page to your employer doesn't seem right...
What if your employer said that he is not going to give you any raise...but wants you to stamp the drawings...i'm not thinking on stamping anything without being paid for that. I refuse to do that!
That's generally only true on the federal side.I'm a licensed Fire Protection Engineer, and all Navy/Marines Corps fire alarm/sprinkler/life safety drawings have to be prepared by someone who passed the NCEES FP exam, no exception. There are certainly qualified Electrical/Mechanical PEs who can fill the role in most cases (maybe even better in some cases), but they are not allowed to seal these jobs.
Charging per sheet? that's preposterous! If an engineer has to sign and seal a drawing he/she won't do it blindfolded, he/she must use the extend of his/hers engineering knowledge and judgement before signing anything. Also, take into consideration it is not the same to review a surface runoff drainage design in Las Vegas than a bridge foundation in San Francisco.Ok basically thats the question..if some one comes to you asking to review and stamp their drawings how much would you charge??..i heard that some engineers do it for $500 a sheet... And some engineers charge more. This is only review that everything is fine and stamp...doesnt include you doing the real design...someone else design it.
(null)
I would consider that to be "repeat engineering", and we do it on tract homes. it's been designed once very thoroughly, then we go through quickly on each repeat and make sure it meets local requirements. I don't see anything wrong with it as long as you go through and understand the design top to bottom on the first run through.This is an old post, but I thought it better to revive than to post new.
I was approached by a residential storm shelter manufacturer about signing and sealing drawings for their products. It is not a requirement to have a PE sign/seal manufactured storm shelters in most places, but there are some cities that require it. I obviously wouldn't do that blindly, but... If it were you, and you went through every single calculation (essentially redesigned the shelter) would you be comfortable signing those designs? Obviously I would be fine with signing a design that I did from scratch, but the goal for them is that my design would look exactly like theirs. Their idea was that I would be able to "redesign" a shelter for each of their sizes, and then stamp the drawing for each install after checking that it met the local requirements.
In the end, I would truly expect my design to look just like theirs because it is a good design. But, would my own calculations and design documents be sufficient to prove that I truly was involved with the design from the beginning? Is it a grey area to design something that looks essentially identical to what a client already uses?
Enter your email address to join: