What occupation do engineers marry?

Professional Engineer & PE Exam Forum

Help Support Professional Engineer & PE Exam Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

What does your spouse do?

  • Engineer

    Votes: 9 20.5%
  • Nurse

    Votes: 8 18.2%
  • Teacher

    Votes: 8 18.2%
  • Other (expound below)

    Votes: 19 43.2%

  • Total voters
    44
What things have you heard today, VTE?

Can't believe this thread has been kicking around for 2+ years. Since way back when I started this thing I have dated the following:

1. Speech Therapist (master's in speech therapy)

2. Graphic Designer (bachelor's in Fine Art)

3. Social Worker (master's in social work)

4. Librarian (bachelor's in EE, master's in information/library services)

Obviously things haven't worked out with any of them. It's sounds like I should start targeting the medical profession. . .

 
Last edited by a moderator:
My wife works from home as a transcriptionist. She's officially trained as a medical transcriptionist, but also does a lot of legal and general transcription. She's also a trained (AS) Network Administrator, though her training was out-of-date by the time she got a job in the field, and more out-of-date now.

 
Wife has a degree in marketing/advertising

But she has worked numerous jobs in our short time of marriage. She is starting another new job next year
She has another new job since this post. Marketing/Recruiting at her alma mater and she will be going back to school to get her MBA (for free). Working for a University definitely has its perks (as in she works 5 days in December), health insurance is cheap, free schooling (highly encouraged you have a Master degree) for her and her spouse (I might get my MBA when she's done).

 
I think that's a first on here. I've never heard of a police officer/engineer mix, but it seems to follow the other trends. Our patrolmen like to make fun of the engineers, because we're an unfeeling, logical group, while they really like to think about people.

 
It works out very well for us. We are both very disciplined with finances, a police officer is used to dealing with "childish" behavior (good for the kids and sometimes the spouse), and our house is more well-armed than some police departments.

I think that's a first on here. I've never heard of a police officer/engineer mix, but it seems to follow the other trends. Our patrolmen like to make fun of the engineers, because we're an unfeeling, logical group, while they really like to think about people.
 
<!--quoteo(post=6737657:date=Jul 11 2009, 12:28 PM:name=Fluvial)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Fluvial @ Jul 11 2009, 12:28 PM) <a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=6737657"><{POST_SNAPBACK}></a></div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->From the DOT. Somebody she worked with saw her down there. The director was not amused.
P.S. that avatar makes my boobs hurt. <img src="style_emoticons/default/poking.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=" :poking: " border="0" alt="poking.gif" /> <img src="style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=" :D " border="0" alt="biggrin.gif" /><!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->

Can they legally fire her based on those grounds?
Yeah, I can't see how they could. Unless it posed a conflict of interest because the DOT was taking their clients to her other place of business.

I'm married to another civil engineer. We argue about hydrology while on road trips.

 
I'm married to another civil engineer. We argue about hydrology while on road trips.

Is that code for something more fun? I'm not married any longer, but the latest GF is a teacher. We seem to at least be able to have intelligent conversation, which is more than I can say for ex.

 
My wife is an engineer, but 180 degrees opposite of me. I'm a civil consultant, she's a biomedical academic. It's good in a lot of ways because we have the same mentality, but bad in certain ways because we have the same mentality.

 
'Argue about hydrology' sounds like a great code word for 'give me a golden shower.'
Ha! But I'm a geo, so we usually skip the kinky stuff and keep to the standard penetration test.

 
Civil?.... shesh.

Mechanical:

Balanced equation?

pressure test

required head

net positive suction head

load test

impact load requirement

impulse momentum

Stroke x Diameter(Pi/4) = Volume

Horsepower(US) = 750 Watts (UK) <---better than expected, conservative? compared to others?

Centistokes <-- Who's counting?

Conservation of momentum (beer goggles, whiskey dic|<, get me a beer please)

^Elastic/Inelastic collision

stress = force/area (smaller A, bigger S?) soderberg criterion kicks in, de-rates performance by a factor of 75% based on realized dynamic forces.

Safety factor? (Double bagger/wrapped?)

Psych chart- evaluate, solve, move on

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top