Function As a senior electrical engineer you will be part of a multidisciplinary team that specifies, designs, integrate and produce complex instruments that are used to measure in a borehole the Earth's geophysical and petrophysical information to locate oil and gas. In your function you will be responsible for the design of the electronics of the new products. As a team player you will be participating in all phases of the product development cycle. You have excellent communication skills, are result oriented, critical and driven to excel in your domain of expertise. Profile Masters or PHD degree in Electrical Engineering with a minimum of 8 years work experience designing custom electronics circuits specifically for the military, aerospace, oil field service or automobile industry. You have a strong analog electronics design background and have design experience with high voltage power supply designs up to 100kV.You have designed multiple sensor acquisition electronics and are familiar with photo multiplier tubes, flux gate magnetometers, and piezo acoustic transducers. Electronics design experience for applications that experience temperatures above 150�C is a plus. You have detailed knowledge of and have designed processor hardware architectures. You are capable of designing SMPS transformers and specifying electronic components such as OPAMPS, memories, DSP, microprocessors, inductors, capacitors to develop new electronics designs to be realized on printed circuits boards. You can build and test electronics circuits. You are familiar with test equipment such as spectrum, logic analyzers and oscilloscopes, firmware code debuggers and emulators. You have experience with HALT or other type of life-testing to determine product reliability. Experience with failure analysis and DFSS is a plus. You are familiar with product development processes and engineering change order processes. You have strong experience with designing FPGA using VHDL. You are well versed using SPICE simulators, ORCAD or PROTEL circuit design and PCB design application software. You are familiar with DSP and microprocessor firmware coding. Please send resume to paul@protiro.com or call 303.639.9480 Thanks for taking a look!! Have a great week everyone.
Houston USA, EE with DSP skills, oil industry
Started by ●March 25, 2008
Reply by ●March 25, 20082008-03-25
paul@protiro.com wrote:> Function > As a senior electrical engineer you will be part of a > multidisciplinary team that specifies, designs, > integrate and produce complex instruments that are used to measure in > a borehole the Earth's > geophysical and petrophysical information to locate oil and gas. In > your function you will be > responsible for the design of the electronics of the new products. As > a team player you will be > participating in all phases of the product development cycle. You > have excellent communication skills, are result oriented, critical and > driven to excel in your domain of expertise. > > Profile > Masters or PHD degree in Electrical Engineering with a minimum of 8 > years work > experience designing custom electronics circuits specifically for the > military, aerospace, oil field > service or automobile industry. You have a strong analog electronics > design background and > have design experience with high voltage power supply designs up to > 100kV.You have designed multiple sensor acquisition electronics and > are familiar with photo multiplier tubes, flux gate magnetometers, and > piezo acoustic transducers. Electronics design experience for > applications that experience temperatures above 150�C is a plus. You > have detailed knowledge of and have designed processor hardware > architectures. You are > capable of designing SMPS transformers and specifying electronic > components such as > OPAMPS, memories, DSP, microprocessors, inductors, capacitors to > develop new electronics > designs to be realized on printed circuits boards. You can build and > test electronics circuits. You > are familiar with test equipment such as spectrum, logic analyzers and > oscilloscopes, firmware > code debuggers and emulators. You have experience with HALT or other > type of life-testing to > determine product reliability. Experience with failure analysis and > DFSS is a plus. You are familiar > with product development processes and engineering change order > processes. You have strong > experience with designing FPGA using VHDL. You are well versed using > SPICE simulators, > ORCAD or PROTEL circuit design and PCB design application software. > You are familiar with > DSP and microprocessor firmware coding. > > Please send resume to paul@protiro.com or call 303.639.9480 > Thanks for taking a look!! Have a great week everyone.Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. That person might not exist ;-) Seriously, I'd consider splitting up the tasks a bit. Use consultants for specialty stuff like analog and maybe FPGA, skills that aren't needed all the time. And they should be unafraid of scary helicopter rides, at least that's what we had to do on the North Sea. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Reply by ●March 26, 20082008-03-26
Joerg wrote: ...> Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. > That person might not exist ;-)Nah. I can do most of that and more. I can design power transformers, medium- and high-tension relays, 400 hp motor controls (and motors), antenna towers, specify steam turbines, and a lot of stuff that used to be an everyday part of EE. I know what a supersynchronous motor is (they're used in follow-the-loggers sawmills) and how to construct full-duplex and simplex telegraphs. I have even made coherers, but as an amateur, not a professional. ... more things in heaven and earth... :-) Jerry -- Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. �����������������������������������������������������������������������
Reply by ●March 26, 20082008-03-26
On 26 Mar, 05:25, Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org> wrote:> Joerg wrote: > > � �... > > > Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. > > That person might not exist ;-) > > Nah. I can do most of that and more. I can design power transformers, > medium- and high-tension relays, 400 hp motor controls (and motors), > antenna towers, specify steam turbines, and a lot of stuff that used to > be an everyday part of EE. I know what a supersynchronous motor is > (they're used in follow-the-loggers sawmills) and how to construct > full-duplex and simplex telegraphs. I have even made coherers, but as an > amateur, not a professional. ... more things in heaven and earth... :-)If this is about designing down-hole gear, you might find these types of jobs a challenge. The pressure is very high (never heard numbers, though) and the temperature is usually in the 200C - 400C range. High enough to make a mess out of most standard components. The word in the grapevine is that lots of down-hole sensors are fiberoptic these days. A mess to design and maintain, but quite robust wrt pressure and temperature. Rune
Reply by ●March 26, 20082008-03-26
On Mar 26, 12:25�am, Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org> wrote:> Joerg wrote: > > � �... > > > Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. > > That person might not exist ;-) > > Nah. I can do most of that and more. I can design power transformers, > medium- and high-tension relays, 400 hp motor controls (and motors), > antenna towers, specify steam turbines, and a lot of stuff that used to > be an everyday part of EE. I know what a supersynchronous motor is > (they're used in follow-the-loggers sawmills) and how to construct > full-duplex and simplex telegraphs. I have even made coherers, but as an > amateur, not a professional. ... more things in heaven and earth... :-) > > Jerry > -- > Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. > �����������������������������������������������������������������������>Nah. I can do most of that and moreYou are not as good as Commander McBragg though: http://www.televisiontunes.com/World_McBragg.html (Sorry I couldn't resist)
Reply by ●March 26, 20082008-03-26
On Mar 26, 12:25�am, Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org> wrote:> Joerg wrote: > > � �... > > > Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. > > That person might not exist ;-) > > Nah. I can do most of that and more. I can design power transformers, > medium- and high-tension relays, 400 hp motor controls (and motors), > antenna towers, specify steam turbines, and a lot of stuff that used to > be an everyday part of EE. I know what a supersynchronous motor is > (they're used in follow-the-loggers sawmills) and how to construct > full-duplex and simplex telegraphs. I have even made coherers, but as an > amateur, not a professional. ... more things in heaven and earth... :-) > > Jerry > -- > Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. > �����������������������������������������������������������������������I bet running a circuit on 100kv could be really exciting down a borehole filled with explosive gas. Even if there is no explosion, the material will likely conduct. Clay
Reply by ●March 26, 20082008-03-26
On Wed, 26 Mar 2008 01:45:14 -0700 (PDT), Rune Allnor <allnor@tele.ntnu.no> wrote:>On 26 Mar, 05:25, Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org> wrote: >> Joerg wrote: >> >> � �... >> >> > Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. >> > That person might not exist ;-) >> >> Nah. I can do most of that and more. I can design power transformers, >> medium- and high-tension relays, 400 hp motor controls (and motors), >> antenna towers, specify steam turbines, and a lot of stuff that used to >> be an everyday part of EE. I know what a supersynchronous motor is >> (they're used in follow-the-loggers sawmills) and how to construct >> full-duplex and simplex telegraphs. I have even made coherers, but as an >> amateur, not a professional. ... more things in heaven and earth... :-) > >If this is about designing down-hole gear, you might find these >types of jobs a challenge. The pressure is very high (never >heard numbers, though) and the temperature is usually in the >200C - 400C range. High enough to make a mess out of most >standard components. > >The word in the grapevine is that lots of down-hole sensors >are fiberoptic these days. A mess to design and maintain, but >quite robust wrt pressure and temperature. > >RuneHi Rune, as strange as it sounds, I've heard of information being transmitted with columns of mud that extend from the bottom of a drilling hole clear up to the ground level. They modulate the mud pressure, or something like that. [-Rick-]
Reply by ●March 26, 20082008-03-26
Rune Allnor wrote:> On 26 Mar, 05:25, Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org> wrote: >> Joerg wrote: >> >> ... >> >>> Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. >>> That person might not exist ;-) >> Nah. I can do most of that and more. I can design power transformers, >> medium- and high-tension relays, 400 hp motor controls (and motors), >> antenna towers, specify steam turbines, and a lot of stuff that used to >> be an everyday part of EE. I know what a supersynchronous motor is >> (they're used in follow-the-loggers sawmills) and how to construct >> full-duplex and simplex telegraphs. I have even made coherers, but as an >> amateur, not a professional. ... more things in heaven and earth... :-) > > If this is about designing down-hole gear, you might find these > types of jobs a challenge. The pressure is very high (never > heard numbers, though) and the temperature is usually in the > 200C - 400C range. High enough to make a mess out of most > standard components. > > The word in the grapevine is that lots of down-hole sensors > are fiberoptic these days. A mess to design and maintain, but > quite robust wrt pressure and temperature.A picture in yesterday's New York Times shows styrofoam coffee cups shrunk to the size of thimbles by the pressure of seawater at depth. http://tinyurl.com/324zy3 Jerry -- Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. �����������������������������������������������������������������������
Reply by ●March 26, 20082008-03-26
bulegoge@columbus.rr.com wrote:> On Mar 26, 12:25 am, Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org> wrote: >> Joerg wrote: >> >> ... >> >>> Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. >>> That person might not exist ;-) >> Nah. I can do most of that and more. I can design power transformers, >> medium- and high-tension relays, 400 hp motor controls (and motors), >> antenna towers, specify steam turbines, and a lot of stuff that used to >> be an everyday part of EE. I know what a supersynchronous motor is >> (they're used in follow-the-loggers sawmills) and how to construct >> full-duplex and simplex telegraphs. I have even made coherers, but as an >> amateur, not a professional. ... more things in heaven and earth... :-) >> >> Jerry >> -- >> Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. >> ����������������������������������������������������������������������� > >> Nah. I can do most of that and more > > You are not as good as Commander McBragg though: > > http://www.televisiontunes.com/World_McBragg.html > > (Sorry I couldn't resist)Waddya mean? McBragg has nothing on me. My secret alias is MacBoast, master of rodomontade. Jerry -- Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. �����������������������������������������������������������������������
Reply by ●March 26, 20082008-03-26
clay@claysturner.com wrote:> On Mar 26, 12:25 am, Jerry Avins <j...@ieee.org> wrote: >> Joerg wrote: >> >> ... >> >>> Looks like you need someone who can do everything in EE there ever was. >>> That person might not exist ;-) >> Nah. I can do most of that and more. I can design power transformers, >> medium- and high-tension relays, 400 hp motor controls (and motors), >> antenna towers, specify steam turbines, and a lot of stuff that used to >> be an everyday part of EE. I know what a supersynchronous motor is >> (they're used in follow-the-loggers sawmills) and how to construct >> full-duplex and simplex telegraphs. I have even made coherers, but as an >> amateur, not a professional. ... more things in heaven and earth... :-) >> >> Jerry >> -- >> Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. >> ����������������������������������������������������������������������� > > > I bet running a circuit on 100kv could be really exciting down a > borehole filled with explosive gas. Even if there is no explosion, the > material will likely conduct. >On our rig (the old Dundee Kingsnorth) we had a gas alert. Man, that's when you think your stomach sinks to your feet. You see some of the really tough guys break out a sweat. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/






