It's good. It's a mix of a lot of different engineering disciplines and my course is also relatively strong in practicals so you see a lot of the theory directly in action. I've actually got my semester exams starting next week. Got exams in Airplane Performance/Gas Turbines (one paper), Aircraft Stress Analysis, Electricity and Magnetism, Vibrations of Aerospace Structures, History of Technology and Materials and Manufacturing. Our last semester we had Aerodynamics, Space Engineering and Technology, Aircraft Structural Analysis, Thermodynamics, and Differential Equations. So you can see the areas covered are quite diverse. It's a good grounding in engineering practices. As I said we do a lot of practical work too like Windtunnel experiments, and structural stress analysis experiments. We had two major projects this year. The first one was related to the design of aircraft controls for a given aircraft. We had to design the control system from scratch and weight up for instance the use of rods or cable/pulley systems. Then we had to focus on a structural component of the system, like a rocker and develop it through from a concept to an end design. Our second project was a space task. We had to develop software to explore where a satellite can be controlled by only measuring two geometric measurement angles.
Anyhow that's a bit a of taste of the kind of things that we do. The best thing we've done this year is probably the zero-G flight. That was bloody awesome
The Wolverine