Alabama Mechanical Engineering Jobs
Engineer Jobs.com lists engineering jobs in more than 750 cities across the U.S. This is our list of all available mechanical engineering jobs in Alabama. Use the orange RSS icon to the left to subscribe to the RSS feed for this page and have Alabama mechanical engineering jobs sent directly to you without having to come back here every day to check for new jobs.
Huntsville, AL
ARINC's Huntsville, AL location is seeking a Sr. Mechanical Aircraft Engineer to support the Defense Systems Engineering unit. This position will lead engineering efforts for the design and integration of mechanical parts and assemblies for aircraft modifications. Parts developed will meet the overall operational and functional requirements of both minor and major aircraft modifications. Respo...
Huntsville, AL
ARINC in Huntsville, AL is looking for a Senior Stress Engineer to support our Defense Systems Engineering & Support division. The candidate will provide senior structural engineering and stress analysis support to a variety of US Army and DoD aircraft integration programs. Conduct mechanical, structural, and thermal analyses of current and emerging aircraft components including communication, nav...
Huntsville, AL
Bentley is the global leader dedicated to providing architects, engineers, constructors, and owner-operators with comprehensive software solutions for sustaining infrastructure. Based on a roadmap comprising pertinent discipline-specific applications and services built on an open platform, each solution is designed to ensure that information flows between processes and project team members to full...
More Alabama Mechanical Engineering Jobs
More Alabama Mechanical Engineering Jobs »
Mechanical Engineering – Job Outlook
Overall, the outlook for engineering employment through 2016 is good because the number of job openings will be about the same as the number of new engineering graduates.
For mechanical engineers specifically, however, the outlook is generally not as good as for other occupations or for other engineering disciplines, with an average job growth in the 4% range through 2016 — due largely to the reduction in the manufacturing industry, where many mechanical engineers are employed.
New advances in other engineering fields will balance out that job loss, as will opportunities in other sectors, but it is not projected to be enough to bring the same level of job growth as in other disciplines.
Source: Occupational Outlook Handbook, Bureau of Labor Statistics