The basic answer to the question is knowledge, or more specifically, acquired knowledge, or the lack thereof. One additionally has to take into account the fact that the tools which we use to perform the jobs have evolved over the years from tape, an X-acto knife, and a mechanical pencil, to a Computer, a CAD Software Package, and a mouse, but assuming all that, and leaving it all aside, let me digress . . . Back there in the dark ages, all of these titles meant something, and usually they had to be earned. Not only were there Junior, Senior, and plain old Draftsman, there were Junior, Senior, and plain old Designers, all of which could be further defined as Mechanical, Electrical, or Electronic, and sometimes combinations such as Electro - Mechanical. Back then, much was made out of whether or not your job position required you to wear a tie or not, and to be an Engineer, meant that you actually really were one, as in having went to Collage somewhere and earned a Degree that actually had the word Engineer printed on it. Engineers went thru the same permutations of Junior, Senior, and plain old whatever in terms of the add on specialties that went into the title. Occasionally, if you were really really good at something they might call you a Specialist of some kind. Seems to me that people stopped having to earn the titles somewhere in the early seventies when Job Shops and Job Shopping became so prevalent, where you could be "rented out" as a Junior Something on Monday, and Senior Something Else Friday, or vice versa, and it seemed to become more of a question of what you could BS your way thru the door as, as opposed to what title or position you could actually earn. It also seemed that the Titles that you could earn thru a promotion within a company used to carry more weight than the Titles you would get by switching companies, but on the other hand, to get the pay increase that you deserved you really did have to move to another company, or at least threaten to. I can remember Shopping at Litton in 1975 as a plain old Draftsman, when on a Friday afternoon I said that there was an error in an ECN they wanted me to incorporate. They took everything off of my board and dropped a pile of new stuff on it, and said: "Here, work on this". Monday morning I called the Shop, and told them that they had given me other work to do, and they said: "Yeah, we know, you're now a Senior Designer, making such and such". I once had a job, where I was a Senior Designer, but instead of working in the Drafting Department, I actually worked in the Engineering Department, where I was best described as a "Trouble Shooter", putting out all of the big fires that came up on a hot Project, which really covered everything from Manufacturing, to Purchasing, to Vender Selection and Certification, to hand holding the Board house to tell them how to refine their processes to be able to correctly make our PCB's, to solving Actual RF, EMI/EMC, and Electrical problems, to some Actual Layout of some Boards, to figuring out why a new PCB Assembly wouldn't work, or work as expected, or finally, to conducting a "one man" Comprehensive Design Review of each and every Board in the whole Project, from a Layout, Mechanical, and Electronics perspective. I occasionally was even asked to hold the hand of some of the Engineers in certain Technical areas. When it came time for my Review, I got rated as "Good", with no further comments or recommendations from my boss, who was the project manager. I went thru the roof. Seems that she was under the impression that I was already a Senior Engineer, at a high rate of pay, and was extremely surprised when I told her that I was only a Senior Designer, the same classification as some of the guys down the hall in the Drafting Department. At that point, she went thru the roof also, and we both went to the Manager of Engineering. Notwithstanding the fact that I was doing the work of one of the top Engineers in the Engineering Department on this specific Project, the Company still had a strict Policy of "No Degree No Title". What they ended up doing was creating a Position and Title for me called "Senior Technical Specialist" (whatever that is), and giving me an appropriate pay increase to go with the title. Respecting Hourly (non-Exempt) verses Salaried (Exempt) pay, I find that in my experience for the most part it has more to do with whether you are an actual Employee verses a Job Shopper / Consultant / Temp / Etc.. My first two Jobs, back in 1966, as an Electronics Draftsman Grade B, and a Junior Draftsman, were both Hourly, as a regular Employee, but my third Job, as a Designer, was Salaried. From that point on, most of my jobs have pretty much followed the Exempt as an Employee - non Exempt as a Temp / Consultant / Shopper. Their is occasionally sometimes a distinction within certain companies based on whether you are working for the Drafting / Design Department or for the Engineering Department, but I have seen this less and less in recent years. Then there is the issue of what people cram into a title, or more correctly, what they can stretch a given title to cover. I earned the title of Designer in taking my third job back in early 1967, and I have considered myself a Designer ever since. Within a week on my first job as an Electronics Draftsman Grade B, drawing schematics and taping boards, I was asking engineers what these little symbols on the schematic were and how they operated, and having learned a few thing about the electronics on the boards that I was taping, by asking such questions, I was able to spot errors fairly quickly, and even offer solutions when I encountered these errors. Needles to say, I was able to rise thru the ranks fairly quickly. I was curious, creative, and wanted to learn. I didn't just perform the same task every day and simply improve in proficiency as most do, and which I did also, but I additionally also tried to learn something new about my job and what I was working on every day. On the other extreme there are what I would call a CAD Jockey (which has already been brought up earlier in this thread). To me, they are a person that can learn to use a specific CAD Tool, of whatever variety, be it Electronic or Mechanical, very well, and become very very fast and very very proficient at using that Tool, without having the slightest knowledge whatsoever of what they are actually doing. I ran into my first real CAD Jockeys back in the early 80's at TRW, working on Lockheed CADAM, an early Mechanical CAD System. This one guy got hired because he was somebody's wife's little brother, and he was part time while he was going to school. He could enter a Drawing or make a change in lightening speed, provided that you spelled everything out clearly and in detail, in a sketch or an ECN, but he couldn't think on his own, and as a result, you couldn't ask him to do something over the phone, or tell him you wanted him to add some feature and expect him to work it out or fill in the details. He was great at sitting next to a Mechanical Engineer who didn't know CADAM and doing the data entry for him, line by line, dimension by dimension, but he was totally, and I do mean totally, worthless on his own. I occasionally still run into a CAD Jockey these days, but of course his or her title is something on the order of Senior Designer or the like. So what do I consider myself? I am a Designer. I am real Designer. A Designer from back in the days when being a Designer really meant something, and when having the title of Designer meant that you really did have to earn it. When being a Designer meant that you could "design" anything from the ground up and solve any problem within the entire Electronic or Mechanical Design and Manufacturing spectrum. Actually, I consider myself a Senior Designer, and additionally I sometimes I describe myself as a non-Degreed Electronic Engineer. I am a lot of other things too, like a Machinist (since I was 12 (employed as one in 1972)), like a Programmer (BASIC since 1972, Fortran and Assembler since 1975), like a Computer Builder / User / Designer (since 1975 (yes I still own several Altar's and IMSAI's)), Like an Inventor (since I was old enough to think (Patent in 1976)), and in general a Jack of all Trades, and a pretty good one at that. But basically, just a Designer. But how do you sell yourself, as just a Designer, or Senior Designer, or a Design Engineer, when you are trying to compete for a Job Position, when you are not only up against other people who may be just as worthy and talented as yourself, if not more, in every respect, but also against people who are lyingthru their you know what on their Resume or exaggerating every position that they may have ever had (especially in an era when past employers may be afraid of being sued for saying anything at all, let alone anything negative), or up against people who really are nothing more than a CAD Jockey. How can one really convey their own worth and experience, as compared to the CAD Jockey sitting next to them? Simply within the Spectrum of Printed Circuit Board Design and Layout, I am glad that IPC has created the CID and CID+ Certifications, since within a narrow framework, these designations do convey a minimum degree of knowledge and proficiency of the holder. On the one perspective, some might say that these Titles simply show nothing more than that you are knowledgeable of industry specs and guidelines, and have paid a few shekels to buy a few specs from IPC and paid a few more to take a test, but on the other hand, these Titles really are something that can convey a certain level of achievement within this specific segment of the industry, and for that purpose, I am very appreciative of the certifications, and very thankful to IPC for creating the programs. Unfortunately, as helpful as this is, it doesn't really answer the question at hand. How do you really compare yourself to the requirements of a specific job, or more realistically, how do you realistically compare yourself to the next guy? Isn't that what you are really asking when you are asking what the difference is between a PCB Designer, and a PCB Design Engineer? Lets first strip off the PCB modifier, so that we can get to the basic question of what the difference is between a Designer and a Design Engineer. Next, we need to realize that one can be titled a Design Engineer because he or she is in the field of Design and has an Engineering Degree, but I don't think that that really fits into the current equation, or the actual question at hand. While it may seem a little crude or limiting to some, it seems that the question fits into what could broadly be termed as within the Drafting Department (at lest in the older perspective), what is the difference between a Designer and a Design Engineer. Excluding the Engineering Degree, and within the realm where there is a specific distinction between Drafting and Engineering, I would say that the progression of jobs and related capability is in the following order: Draftsman; Designer; and then Design Engineer; all of which have their own gradations such as Junior, regular, and Senior, and all of which can have additional modifiers that may pertain to specialties. Some may balk with being assigned to the Drafting Department, and in many cases it may not even be called that anymore, but strictly speaking, there is Drafting, and there is Engineering, and they really are separate, even if the Drafting Department has come to be been called the Design Department for the last 20 years (or something similar), or even the CAD Department. Additionally, I believe that there is something else that enters the picture as we progress from Draftsman to Designer (or some might say as we progress from Designer to Design Engineer), along with real hard earned "practical" experience, that hasn't been mentioned before, and that is an additional expertise and knowledge in the realm of Design, Packaging, and Manufacturing, that on the one hand might approach that of an Engineer, and yet on the other hand, an expertise and knowledge that is of a much different perspective than that which might "just" be had by an Engineer. It's kind of hard to put exactly what I am thinking of here into words, but maybe it relates to going back to what I think it takes to be a "real" Designer. In the final analysis, maybe I can't answer the question of what the difference is between a PCB Designer and PCB Design Engineer, other than to say that I earned the title of Senior Design Engineer while employed at TRW in the early 80's, for whatever it 's worth, but I would put it this way: Do you understand the operation of each and every component on that PCB that you are working on, not only from a Mechanical and Packaging perspective, but also from an Electronics and Operational perspective, both individually and as a part of a circuit and an overall assembly and part of a larger system? Do you catch errors on a regular basis, and can you fix the errors yourself, before you report back to the Engineer? Can you explain to your boss why the last 13 DRC Errors that your system kicked out really are not Errors at all, and more importantly, can you convince him that you are correct? Some might think that maybe I am being a little hard or even a little elitist here, but I'd say that if you can't answer these questions in the affirmative, then you are not yet a PCB Design Engineer, in spite of what your actual Title might be. But then again, how many of us that are called Designers, actually are? Maybe I really shouldn't go there, since I have probably already exceeded the maximum number of enemies made allowed in any given single post. JaMi Smith Designer * * * * * ----- Original Message ----- From: "Susy Webb" <[log in to unmask]> To: <[log in to unmask]> Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2005 9:43 AM Subject: Re: [DC] Difference between PCB designer and PCB design Engineer > Joe asked me the question below, and my response had as much to do with the original question from Brad as it did from Joe's question, so I am passing it on here too. > > Hi Joe, > > I was considered a Sr PCB Designer for many years. In fact, that is still what I call myself. To me, there is little difference between that and a Sr PCB Layout Engineer, which is my current title. But that is my opinion.... I would be the same quality of designer no matter what my title was. The point is that the company's title for me reflects the company's understanding that there is a huge amount of engineering that goes into a designer's job these days, and as such the title and job grade reflect that. It is a little bit of that recognition that we as a profession have been begging for all these years. > > Early on, we were all given titles like Drafter or Cad operator. And even then, when connecting the dots was a more descriptive term for what we did as a profession because we didn't have to worry about rise time, crosstalk, signal integrity, EMI, etc., etc., we were not drafters. So I have never cared for that term, nor Cad Operator. Some companies are slow to raise the title and description "bar" and some are not. Some companies are fairly clueless as to what we do! > > In my opinion, a designer of any quality today has to do everything they possibly can to have a working knowledge of many different forms of engineering to create a quality product. That includes taking responsibility for our own career by reading and learning, being an active member of the Designer's Council to learn and participate, and attending conferences (among other things). The engineering world we live in is changing rapidly and if we aren't doing anything to catch up and/or keep up, then we are moving backwards. So, Sr anything should not indicate years of work, but ability and knowledge base. Again... just my opinion. > > So while you did not ask for a soap box, I hope you don't mind that you got one. The answer to your question is that we do not have anyone with a title "Drafter" partially because I would fight against that title (even for a beginner.. Jr PCB Designer would be better) and we do have a PCB Designer and a Sr PCB designer and a couple of EE's who occasionally lay out boards.... but that's a soap box for another day. > > Best Regards, > Susy > > > > > > From: "Johnson, Joseph SEA" <[log in to unmask]> > > Date: 2005/09/28 Wed AM 10:20:04 CDT > > To: <[log in to unmask]> > > Subject: RE: [DC] Difference between PCB designer and PCB design Engineer > > > > Susy, > > > > Does your company also have a Sr. PCB Designer / Drafter ? > > > > Joe J. > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: DesignerCouncil [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Susy > > Webb > > Sent: Tuesday, September 27, 2005 10:34 AM > > To: [log in to unmask] > > Subject: Re: [DC] Difference between PCB designer and PCB design > > Engineer > > > > Hi all, > > > > I agree with Matthew and others... Ours is a very challenging job IF it > > is done right, and there are so many more things that are in our realm > > of responsibility that CAD or PCB draftsman just does not work any more. > > My last three companies have called me a Sr PCB Layout Engineer and I > > like that, and think it is quite descriptive of what I do! > > > > Susy > > > > > > > > > > From: Matthew Lamkin <[log in to unmask]> > > > Date: 2005/09/27 Tue AM 03:00:12 CDT > > > To: [log in to unmask] > > > Subject: Re: [DC] Difference between PCB designer and PCB design > > > Engineer > > > > > > There may well be 2 different types of engineer designing boards, but > > people, don't think that just because someone does not initially design > > the actual circuit they are any lesser! > > > In fact it could be the opposite. > > > > > > My job title is PCB Draftsman, I don't "design" the circuit, other > > engineers do that, they fill out a BOM & raise ECN's too. > > > > > > I take their fag packet drawings & ideas & turn them into a > > > manufacturable product, adding the EMC/DFT etc bits into them & coming > > up with a finished board that is both well suited to the job & is > > manufacturable. > > > > > > There are so many degree qualified electronic engineers that although > > they really know their stuff in electronics are absolutely useless at > > board layout, they have to do all sorts of other jobs as well as design > > a board. > > > > > > They forget EMC, forget decoupling, terminations & how to make them so > > that the assembly dept does not struggle to build them, I have to do all > > these things daily. > > > > > > I look on myself as a specialist in the field, doing board layout all > > my working day, not just a small percentage of it. It has been said that > > my boards are a damn site better than any that the "engineers" could > > ever do. > > > > > > Matthew Lamkin. > > > hookemuper! > > > > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > > From: DesignerCouncil [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of > > > Kevin L. Seaman > > > Sent: Monday, September 26, 2005 7:40 PM > > > To: [log in to unmask] > > > Subject: Re: [DC] Difference between PCB designer and PCB design > > > Engineer > > > > > > > > > Brad, > > > > > > In 1978 I worked with Dave Helm at Floating Point Systems in > > > Beaverton, Oregon. He use to say that there were TWO kinds of PCB > > Designers: > > > > > > 1) the kind who DESIGN boards > > > > > > and... > > > > > > 2) the kind who HOOK 'EM UP > > > > > > Kevin L. Seaman > > > OrCAD CIS Librarian > > > Allegro PCB Librarian > > > Sr. Staff PCB Layout Engineer > > > Broadcom Corp. Irvine, CA > > > (949)926-5656 (ext. 65656) > > > > > > P.S. > > > Yes, I made up those job titles all by myself... > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > > From: DesignerCouncil [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of > > > Jaurique, Brad > > > Sent: Monday, September 26, 2005 10:52 AM > > > To: [log in to unmask] > > > Subject: [DC] Difference between PCB designer and PCB design Engineer > > > > > > All, > > > > > > I am in debate with my Director, who is/was a mechanical > > > Engineer, over what the difference is between these two job > > > descriptions. I believe some of our designers do the job design > > > engineer and I want to prove it. > > > > > > Does anyone have job descriptions etc on these. I am also > > > trying to rewrite our very weak current descriptions. We have 3 > > > Senior designers who all do the job differently and have different > > > levels of experience. I don't feel you should have a title senior > > > because you have been designing for lots of years. You could have lots > > > > > of years of the same experience. You should be titled Senior due to > > > range of experience and level of that. > > > > > > Sorry if I am ranting but this is important to me. > > > > > > Brad Jaurique C.I.D. > > > Senior PCB Designer > > > Pelco > > > (559)292-1981 ext. 2347 > > > [log in to unmask] > > > Tell me and I forget; Show me and I remember; Involve me and I > > understand. > > > ================ > > > Confidentiality Note: > > > The information contained in this transmission is legally privileged > > > and confidential, intended only for the use of the individual or > > > entity named above. If the reader of this message is not the intended > > > recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, > > > distribution, or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited. > > > > > If you receive this communication in error, please delete the message > > > and notify us immediately by telephone call to +1-559-292-1981. > > > ================ > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DesignerCouncil Mail List provided as a free service by IPC using LISTSERV 1.8d To unsubscribe, send a message to [log in to unmask] with following text in the BODY (NOT the subject field): SIGNOFF DesignerCouncil. To temporarily stop/(restart) delivery of DesignerCouncil send: SET DesignerCouncil NOMAIL/(MAIL) Search previous postings at: www.ipc.org > On-Line Resources & Databases > E-mail Archives Please visit IPC web site http://www.ipc.org/contentpage.asp?Pageid=4.3.16 for additional information, or contact Keach Sasamori at [log in to unmask] or 847-615-7100 ext.2815 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------