Engineer or Mechanical Engineer or Electro-Mechanical Engineer

December 29, 2016 | Author: api-77735644 | Category: N/A
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Electro-Mechanical Engineer or Field Service Enginer Bio-Medical Engineering Key Qualifications Summary: * * * * *

13+ years bio-medical experience plus R & D sustaining experience 1 year with Fisher Scientific repairing a broad range of scientific equipment. Designed a medical IV pump analyzer series 4 years of clinical experience within the OR during cardiac operations. Varied electro-mechanical skills with multiple companies

Skills Electronics Trouble Shooting Solid communication and word processing skills Highly knowledgeable in adhesives, and tool making for stampings and plastic injection molds Knowledgeable in ultrasonic welding, Moderate machining; hydraulics; Welding: Stick, MIG, acetylene and propane. Versatile mechanical knowledge Proto-typing/ development of electronic and mechanical projects, fixtures, jigs. Work History 07-present Bio-Medical Technician for Uintah Basin Medical Center. Service and r epair of BioMedical equipment 02-07 cared for aging parents, ins talled HVAC Equipment and restored and repaired farm machinery and heating/air c onditioning equipment. 00-02 Project Engineer for Delta Products, Austin, TX; Managed and facilitated s erver power supply development between 3 Delta R & D groups in Asia and Dell Co mputer. Facilitated development for 7 server power supply projects plus VRM mod ules and smaller projects from early prototype to mass production. Facilitated mechanical bug problem/solutions, FEMA, certifications, logic and quality probl ems, EMC tests, HALT testing, and documentation issues. 95-99 -Contract/Development Engineer for various companies: (While in school f rom 98-99) 95-96 -Manufacturing Engineer for Production Technologies, San Carlos, CA; 97 MTI, Roosevelt, Utah. Packaging Design and Chaired Quality Control Co mmittee. Management took suggestion to provide quality cases for shipment and a major savings In shipping and handling was realized. Shipping and handling clai ms were reduced to practically a nonexistent level with quality owner/shipping c ases and an additional product for sale was realized. 98 Autoliv, Ogden, Utah. Fabricated Auto Testing Equipment. 97-00 Hay Cubes, USA, Roosevelt, Utah Designed, fabricated, trouble shot, implemented mixing bin, line cont rols, and water valve injection assemblies, fabricated conveyors, screens, diver ter, and other processing equipment. Non functional plant was brought up to fun ctional status. 95 Scientific Equipment Repairman, Fisher Scientific, Santa Clara, CA 94 ET for Ball (Soda can Manufacturer) PLC programming and electrical work. 93-89 Product and Safety Engineer for Coastcom; Concord/Alameda, CA.; Assiste d in power supply design, performed component engineering tasks; and acted as coordinator for UL, CSA, FCC, AT&T, and all outside laboratory testing. Perf ormed thermal analysis. Prototyped circuitry and tested to verify performance. Documented the same. Reverse engineered a video conferencing system. Provid ed the key cooling enhancement ideology for saving the best product line from th

ermal failure. This enabled Coastcom with their most popular and revenue prod ucing product for many years. Collaborated on the key idea to the mechanical engineering department to cut cos ts on card ejectors and simplify and stream line single cards so that regular e jectors were eliminated by a unique cam system interfaced with the front fold do wn panels. This idea saved costs on tooling and is in use on all popular card s today. Provided negotiation strategy to cause UL to drop blank front panel requirement s on all multiplexers. This saved Coastcom over $26.00 each on every blank fro nt panel that would have been required. Some installations would have required as many as 24 blank front panels. This saved Coastcom up to $684 (wholesale cos t) per shelf on a 24 slot blank requirement and made the product more competitiv e. Provided the key prototype to side step separate UL submittals on neighborin g shelves. Coastcom had UL approvals on their Twin T1M before the shelf design was released for production. This saved Coastcom $3000-5000 for a separate submittal and related UL safety investi gation. Coordinated the Caddock part classification to minimize the UL red tape on the FXS Cards. Contributed to the team effort to educate and waive UL's misapplied f ront end testing on the FXS cards.

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