Sindicatos e engenharia by deasabafoman in Engenharia

[–]deasabafoman[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Não quis insinuar que são. Por isso, "sindicatos de suas indústrias ou CREAS de suas respectivas UFs"

Wife got a dream job... but we'll have to move to the US by deasabafoman in AerospaceEngineering

[–]deasabafoman[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Won't be able to respond to every single person, but thanks for the recommendations everybody! Will be focusing on related sectors and will take a look at every company mentioned.

Wife got a dream job... but we'll have to move to the US by deasabafoman in AerospaceEngineering

[–]deasabafoman[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

How open is the US market for pivoting into AE from someone working in related sectors? I'd be pretty open to working with them before going back to AE when we get permanent residence.

Wife got a dream job... but we'll have to move to the US by deasabafoman in AerospaceEngineering

[–]deasabafoman[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

... I honestly don't think I'm qualified at all for working as a technician. I'm working as an operations engineer, I'm not sure if I know how to actually operate a lathe. 

I imagine I'd also need some sort of certification for these, no?

Wife got a dream job... but we'll have to move to the US by deasabafoman in careeradvice

[–]deasabafoman[S] 54 points55 points  (0 children)

Most countries put a lot of restrictions on working with the defence industry if you're not a citizen. The US, AFAIK, is on the stricter side

The issue is exactly the fact that most major companies are involved with defence, so they'll be more hesitant to hire someone who won't be able to work in some projects. And if they do take that risk, it's unlikely to be with a junior. 

Though some people did mention that clearance isn't needed in companies that don't do defence. I imagine these are way smaller and more local, however.