As far as my major-stamping die is concerned, the metal parts in mobile phones, computer interfaces, CPU terminals and memory chips are all produced without precision stamping dies, so the future development can be imagined, the precision of product demand is getting higher and higher, and the natural die technology is also improving and the application range is wider.
I am also a junior college student, majoring in mechanical and electrical engineering. My major in mechanical drawing is the best in the school. After work, I went to the precision stamping die industry, and the most used is the three views. Through the accumulation of on-site production experience in previous years, I have been designing molds for several years now, and I think it is not bad.
Mold industry is a technical industry. Nowadays, young people don't pay attention to technical learning. You can tell by doing education and training in the company. Young people don't understand the mold industry, they just want money. They don't think this is a technology that can support themselves.
For a junior college student majoring in mold, I suggest you know the characteristics of various mold industries now and find out what kind of mold you like to learn, such as stamping mold, which is called "cold stamping mold", which has little to do with heat; Injection mold must consider the melting temperature of plastic and so on; The design of stamping die and injection die is completely different. There are many two-dimensional software designs for stamping, and of course some people like three-dimensional software design. Injection molding must have three-dimensional software design. ; Knowing the difference between these molds, which one do you think you prefer? I suggest you start from school to establish the key points. Learning textbook knowledge is the most basic. Although the current mold technology is high, it also evolved from the foundation.
After three years of study, you will meet life and study in the factory. My suggestion is that you must lower yourself and learn from the beginning. You will find that what you learn at school is useless. You will stay at the scene for two or three years, start to repair the mold, learn more and ask more questions. After all, you still have a degree, and it is most suitable to switch to design, with both on-site experience and design ability. My experience in stamping dies for several years: few undergraduates can stay in other places for two or three years, and they will feel too bitter and tired. They directly applied to be design apprentices and began to study design, but the designed mold was not suitable for on-site production at all, which was not a good design.
College students should not feel inferior. If you like this industry, you can do it well. Believe in yourself!
In addition, what kind of social mold schools and mold research institutes can't learn much by spending money. It will be useful to use those time to find a better mold company to study.