Posted by : Unknown Friday 18 October 2013




Mechatronics Engineer 




Mechatronics engineer and technician 

What is "Mechatronics"

In playing devil's advocate to spark controversy and conversation ...It use to be USA’s manufacturing and other industries where set apart from the rest of the world by its innovation and efficiency brought about by education, teamwork and individual capitalistic drive. In plain English, our young knew the way to a financially secure future was to become a master of their trade. If you had an electrical problem you called a master electrician, mechanical problem… get a master mechanic, need something machined, a machinist. Need electronic device designed, you get electronic engineer, an electrical control designed… get an electrical engineer.


The mentality was you need something done; it was cheaper and safer to get the right expert for the right job. Common sense told us no-one is an expert at everything. So on multidiscipline projects, you built a team of experts to get the best end results possible. Need a machine designed your team would consist of several engineers, a mechanical engineer, software engineer, electrical engineer, etc. Decades ago the industry combined the maintenance department team from experts in each field, to a single individual into the “maintenance mechanic” or technician. (<< click to learn more) Or the one of the other dozen titles employers makeup to refer to one individual who replaced the need for maintenance departments to have a separate employee specializing in electrical, another in mechanical, machinist, etc.

In recent history, this strategy has spread to the engineering disciplines too, with the creation of the job title “Mechatronics Engineer” or "Mechatronics Technician". So instead of hiring 4 experts, a mechanical engineer, and an electrical engineer, and an electronics engineer and a software engineer, they hire 1, a Mechatronics engineer. Several decades ago the industry found by combining job titles and responsibilities, they could reduce their workforce size and labor cost. Maybe it was not a desire to increase revenue for management and stockholder by reducing the labor force. Maybe a few actually believed you could get even more innovation and efficiency from one individual who knew enough of each discipline to get by and performed all the task themselves, instead of having a team of experts.

 ‘Jack of All Trades’ … Master of NONE!

Theories of the origins of this multi-skill trend in manufacturing might be insightful, but without the decision makers being truthful in studies and surveys, that is all they will ever be, theories. The Japanese style of management, in their great wisdom was to have the experts be familiar with the other skills in the industry. But their intent was just to get the expert familiar, not actually combining the jobs into one person. Like having their maintenance and engineers run the machines in the manufacturing plant, to be more familiar. The apartment complex hired a general maintenance man to perform the simpler task of electrical, carpentry, plumbing. But Government regulations required that apartment manager to hire a licensed master electrician, carpenter, plumber to do the major projects.

No two minds ever come together without thereby creating a third, invisible intangible force, which may be likened to a third mind.” — Napoleon Hill, Author

So when you rely on one single individual to do what multiple experts used to, you lose that "third mind", reduce innovation, creativity and expertise in any one single discipline.

In manufacturing, government has no such regulations, opening up the door for combining jobs and diluting the industry’s expertise. Nobody thinks is that good thing, or a bad thing, they just accept it as the way is now days… “One wears many hats in today’s jobs.” The field of Mechatronics first introduced by the Japanese (Tetsuro Mori  of the Japanese company Yaskawa in 1969) was not intended to replace the mechanical engineer, the software engineer, etc. with an electrical or electronics engineer who knew a little about the other three disciplines. It was conceived to provide the electrical engineer with extra education needed to be proficient working with robots.
 This is in line with the Japanese philosophy.

But  in the USA, with mentality to constantly reduce the 10-15% labor cost and put those profits in to management and stockholders pockets… it is likely the Mechatronics will be the engineering version of the maintenance technician. With the 10% for-profit colleges and other educational institutions growth exploding since 1995, that big business will welcome new combined job titles that require additional education too.

Those seeking a career in Mechatronics  should first have a clear definition of the job description and the pay. (click formanufacturing career path to read more.) The go-to source for occupational titles and job descriptions should be the government’s OOH. But they list it under a catch all job title “Electro-mechanical Technicians” , list the pay at $49k, and refer you to “O*NET” for any kind of detailed description.

On O*NET where they show the pay at $90k, you will find a lot text but very little actual description for “Mechatronics Engineers”. That is because for their job descriptions, they cut and paste a template description for similar jobs and the editor quickly changes whatever they may know about that particular job description. That is why on the Mechatronics description page you will find “accountant” referred to 3 times when that discipline has nothing to do with mechatronics. You will also find after viewing several of the job descriptions about 60% is the same generic details on all the related descriptions (filler). For example they list under handful of tools needed for the job, “Bandsaws”, under knowledge – “English Language”, under skills – “speaking, writing”. :>)

Also colleges like to refer their students to google ad farm sites like Glassdoor when students want to evaluate actual pay they might receive in the Mechatonics field. Because the site doesn’t have any actual current salaries for the Mechatronics field, it will list similar fields such as design engineer or software developer. This may give students a false since of the actual pay they will receive in the real world.

The most informative site about a Mechatronics engineer or technician was not the Official government site (OOH), or the website the Government recommends (O’ net), or the one colleges sent students too for income evaluation (Glassdoor), it was Wikipedia’s Mechatronics page! That’s amazing.
Your professional and respectful comments are appreciated below




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While the nounrobotics is commonplace today, it wasn't back in the 1941 when sci-fi writer Isaac Asimov coined the term in a short story published inAstounding Science Fiction. It took another 20 years before the term really took off, and by the 1980s, robotics had firmly planted itself in the English language. The term robot entered English in 1923 from a translation of Karel Capek's 1920 play calledRossum's Universal Robots. It came to English from Czech term robotnik meaning "slave."
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What is mechatronics engineering?

What is mechatronics engineering?

Mechatronics engineering combines mechanical engineering, computing and electronics to create functional, smart products.

Every day you come into contact with products of mechatronics engineering. They include cars, Blu-ray and DVD players, microwave ovens, dishwashers and washing machines.

The processes and production lines used to make these and many other products are also mechatronic in nature.



What do mechatronics engineers do?

Mechatronics engineers design new products or improve existing devices by adding mechatronic elements. They also design, construct and run factory production lines and processes.
Mechatronics engineers are responsible for devices such as:

  • Antiskid braking systems
  • Clothes dryers that adjust their operation based on the dampness of the clothes
  • Washing machines that can sense the amount of dirt in the washing load and vary water and electricity to suit
  • Chemical sensors in microwave ovens that can monitor the smell of food to ensure it is cooked perfectly.

Careers in mechatronics engineering

You will be equipped with the knowledge and skills to design, build and operate the intelligent products and systems of today and tomorrow.

The applications for mechatronics engineering are virtually unlimited and the need for professionals in this progressive field is increasing. You will be in high demand.

There are many research opportunities for mechatronics engineers in nanotechnology, robotics, by-wire technologies for motor vehicles, bioengineering and many other developing fields.

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