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Participant

Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 1

Job Opportunity / Hydraulics Engineer

06/21/2010 11:31 AM

Permanent Position - Leading agricultural manufacturing company seeking Hydraulics Engineer in various locations.

Job Description:

· Designs and directs construction of power and other hydraulic engineering projects for control and use of water: Computes and estimates rates of water flow.

· Specifies type and size of equipment, such as conduits, pumps, turbines, pressure valves, and surge tanks, used in transporting water and converting water power into electricity.

· Directs, through subordinate supervisors, activities of workers engaged in and/or performs dredging, digging cutoffs, placing jetties, and constructing levees to stabilize streams or open water ways.

· Designs and coordinates construction of artificial canals, conduits, and mains to transport and distribute water; and plans reservoirs, pressure valves, and booster stations to obtain proper water pressure at all levels. Frequently builds laboratory models to study construction and flow problems.

If Interested, please send updated resume to my email. Thank you!

CR4 Admin: This post has been moderated to remove a personal email and/or phone number: Do not post phone numbers or email addresses. The CR4 Admin will delete all phone numbers posted in threads or comments, and we strongly urge you not to put up email addresses.

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Guru

Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: California
Posts: 2363
Good Answers: 63
#1

Re: Job Opportunity / Hydraulics Engineer

06/22/2010 12:35 PM

Hmm, Well, where and how much? What are the benefits? What are the pre-requisites (would assume you'd want at least a license to practice in New York State and California, as all other states would pretty much automatically give committy for a Civil PE licensed in those two states).

I would guess if it were in US and agriculture related, any good company would be where the agriculture is, so California, Florida, maybe Texas or Arizona. Pay might be competitive in those states, except Texas. However, if it is in the Rust Belt, could not imagine anyone wanting to move there at those pay scales

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