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Ask HN: Admin girl wants to get into radio engineering

5 pointsby alicewalesover 8 years ago
tl;dr: I&#x27;m a low-paid public sector administrative worker with some unutilised technical skills. I want to pivot away from admin work and go into RF&#x2F;radio engineering, a field that I&#x27;ve had a long-standing interest in.<p>It&#x27;s not a field that&#x27;s totally unknown to me, otherwise I wouldn&#x27;t be considering it. I&#x27;ve had an amateur radio licence and been active since I was a teenager - a full UK licence, not the Foundation ones that they hand out now. I&#x27;ve designed my own antennas, built and repaired my own kit, organised DXpeditions, I&#x27;m experimenting with SDR. It&#x27;s something I have a genuine interest in.<p>I&#x27;m not the sort of person who considers any kind of work &#x27;beneath me&#x27; otherwise I wouldn&#x27;t be doing this in the first place. Work is work, a means to an end. I just don&#x27;t feel like insecure, non-technical, paper-shuffling public sector administrative work is really the best use of my skill set and aptitudes.<p>RF engineering seems like a field with a future and a bit more security. I mean, there&#x27;s very little these days that doesn&#x27;t have a radio of some kind inside it. I&#x27;m just not sure how to get into it as a professional career, what qualifications I&#x27;d need, that sort of thing. I have A-levels even though I have no degree, but my A-levels aren&#x27;t in the sciences because at 16 I was convinced I wanted to be a journalist. Is it something you need to go to university and get a degree to do, or are there more vocational qualifications or apprenticeships you can do instead? As far as I can tell, the degree route would require a three-year BSc in electrical engineering or similar, followed by an MSc to specialise in the radio side of things.<p>Is this a path anyone else here has taken? What routes are there into this kind of career? It really feels like the thing I want to do to feel more challenged, more fulfilled, in order to get out of being everyone&#x27;s assistant and into a role where I actually <i>am</i> something. Thanks all so much in advance for your help!

3 comments

brudgersover 8 years ago
My take is that a university education is likely to be the simplest and most high probability path to achieving <i>professional</i> engineering competence. Sure it&#x27;s possible to autodidact anything. But doing so requires creating the structure and metrics on top of just learning all the things a professional ought to know at a time when a person lacks the knowledge to determine what a professional ought to know.<p>To your advantage, unlike many people entering an engineering curriculum, there&#x27;s already an interest and some hands on practical experience and knowledge. To your disadvantage, part of the motivation appears to be status conferred by a title&#x2F;degree [these don&#x27;t directly translate into competence]. I suspect that the former outweights the latter, and that is a net positive.<p>In the end, vocational training tends to lead to vocational careers and professional training tends to lead to professional careers.<p>Good luck.
throwaway000002over 8 years ago
If you want a professional career, unless you can demonstrate domain knowledge, I&#x27;d imagine you&#x27;d need a university degree. Going (back) to university is something I&#x27;d not be able to tolerate. If you&#x27;re a hands-on kind of person, perhaps a degree in something as close to radio engineering at a polytechnic may be a better option.<p>It&#x27;s really a hard call. I&#x27;d recommend getting in touch, as in writing a letter, explaining your situation and motivation to the radio engineering departments at, for example: Lime Microsystems, CSR, Neul, Imagination Tech, ARM (wireless IP unit), the BBC, Nordic Semi, enOcean, Philips (wireless lighting unit), Thinfilm ASA (printed NFC)...<p>The list is almost endless, and there is an immense range in activity from blue-sky work, to out-in-the-field fixing stuff (like radios on oil fields).<p>Good luck, I&#x27;ll be secretly cheering you on.
AlDante2over 8 years ago
Hi, I think its a great idea. I&#x27;m a software engineer, so I can&#x27;t give you any great insights, but what I would suggest is looking at online courses such as this one: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;ocw.mit.edu&#x2F;courses&#x2F;electrical-engineering-and-computer-science&#x2F;6-661-receivers-antennas-and-signals-spring-2003&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;ocw.mit.edu&#x2F;courses&#x2F;electrical-engineering-and-comput...</a><p>That will give you an idea of what kind of skills you will need - I would guess physics, maths and electronics would be good places to start.<p>This site has some links to job vacancies at the bottom - that would give you some idea of what employers are looking for.<p>Good luck!