Design Engineer
(From Wikipedia)
Design engineer is a general term that covers multiple engineering disciplines: Electrical, mechanical and civil engineering are the basic three. Architectural engineers, in the U.S., and building engineers in the U.K., are also examples of design engineers.
The design engineer is distinguished from the designer/drafter by virtue of the fact that a design engineer sets the direction of the design effort. The design engineer usually leads the project, directing the designer/drafter as necessary. He/she works with industrial designers and marketing to develop the product concept and specifications and directs the design effort from that point. Products are usually designed with input from a number of sources such as manufacturing, purchasing, tool making and packaging engineering. When the design involves public safety, the design engineer is usually required to be licensed, for example a Professional Engineer in the U.S. There is usually an ‘industrial exemption’ for design engineers working on project internal to companies.
The design engineer may direct a team of designers to create the drawings necessary for prototyping and production, or in the case of buildings, for construction. However, with the advent of CAD and solid modeling software (Autodesk Inventor, SolidWorks, Pro/ENGINEER, CATIA, etc, for example) the design engineer may create the drawings him or herself.
The next responsibility of many design engineers is prototyping. A model of the product is created and reviewed. Prototypes are usually functional and non-functional. Functional prototypes are used for testing and the non-functional are used for form and fit checking. This stage is where design flaws are found and corrected, and tooling, manufacturing fixtures, and packaging are developed.
Once the prototype is finalized, after many iterations, the next step is preproduction. The design engineer, working with a manufacturing engineer and a quality engineer reviews an initial run of components and assemblies for design compliance. This is often determined through statistical process control. Variations in the product are correlated to aspects of the process and eliminated. The most common metric used is the process capability index Cpk. A Cpk of 1.0 is considered the baseline acceptance for full production go-ahead.
The design engineer may follow the product and make requested changes and corrections throughout the life of the product. This is referred to as “cradle to grave” engineering.
A design engineer is often expected to have the following qualifications:
* a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering from an accredited institution
* experience or knowledge in manufacturing and fabrication, or construction methods
Also, industrial design engineers must have:
* a thorough understanding of statistical quality control
* an understanding of marketing and project management
Students interested in pursuing a career in design engineering should include Analytical Geometry or Pre-calculus and Physics into their high school curriculum.











Hi Maliki!
Good blog! I’m one of the person that really get involving in this field. We r using Pro-Engineer as our design software at our office. I think you must propose this blog to CAD/CAM and Manufacturing Engineering student from UM. They really got headache of Pro-E software as what I’ve gone through b4…the worse nightmare ever after.. Yeah, it’s really true, do u know that?
Thanks Kakeru.
This year I’m reaching a decade mark of experience in using pro-e. I’m really want to share my experience to others but dunno how to start it… it’s very much different between “using” and “teaching”. That’s why I’m blogging this topic… very lazy & slow, though :) btw, thanks for the comment.. its burn my spirit to get along…
Hi..which company you’re from. I’m a CATIA V5 user designing automotive parts.
Hi Fauzi! Thanks for visited my blog. I’m designing Hi-Fi product… CATIA… wow! its great CAD especially for handling thousands of parts in big assembly.. the mainstream CAD system for automotive & aeronautical industries.. am I right? But, its not so user friendly compared to it’s sibling, Solidworks (just my personal thought coz I’ve tried to learn CATIA V5R17 before, but can’t caught up).
I’m a Pro-E user, designing for office workstation. Don’t have any experience related to use the other design software like CATIA or SolidWorks, except AutoCAD. My friend said that the other software is easier compared to Pro-E… Is it true?
Hi Kakeru. I think nobody can exactly answer it yes or no coz its depend on individual skill and which area you want to use the CAD (e.g. use for product design or industrial design, type of industries etc). In general use, personally I’d like to line-up these 3 CADs as follow (from easy to difficult) (1)Solidworks (2)Pro-E (3)CATIA.
For the AutoCAD, I’ve no much experience about it but I think it has great supports from architecture/construction industries.