Help

I am expecting a rank of abt 2000-3000 in jee with a score of about 227.In aieee I have managed 308 THAT WOULD EARN ME A RANK OF ABT 700 ,But i am adamant about going to IIt's..Can u plz tell me what streams i can get .....and about the prospects of production engg,process engg ..I am very interested in the mechanical field..plz help

15 Answers

1
kamalendu ghosh ·

u can visit the JEE websiteand go thru and see the last year counselling results..

13
deepanshu001 agarwal ·

bro v bothr sailin int the same boat.......even i ll be gettin pretty much the same scores in iit nd aieee as expected......
i analysed the openin nd closin ranks for each stream nd branch...
gettin mech in older iits except guwahati.....seems rili diff ...

even i m rili confused .....whether to tak comp in sum nit or iiit

or go for sum branch lyk civil in roorkee or guhawati....which seems to be the only possibilty

tht too if get the scores as they r expected...

1
kamalendu ghosh ·

first decide which is ur preference... COMPSCI. or IIT ... first make up ur mind on this!

1
kamalendu ghosh ·

copied :
A branch of engineering that involves the design, control, and continuous improvement of integrated systems in order to provide customers with high-quality goods and services in a timely, cost-effective manner. It is an interdisciplinary area requiring the collaboration of individuals trained in industrial engineering, manufacturing engineering, product design, marketing, finance, and corporate planning. In many organizations, production engineering activities are carried out by teams of individuals with different skills rather than by a formal production engineering department.

In product design, the production engineering team works with the designers, helping them to develop a product that can be manufactured economically while preserving its functionality. Features of the product that will significantly increase its cost are identified, and alternative, cheaper means of obtaining the desired functionality are investigated and suggested to the designers. The process of concurrently developing the product design and the production process is referred to by several names such as design for manufacturability, design for assembly, and concurrent engineering. See also Design standards; Process engineering; Product design; Production planning.

The specification of the production process should proceed concurrently with the development of the product design. This involves selecting the manufacturing processes and technology required to achieve the most economical and effective production. The technologies chosen will depend on many factors, such as the required production volume, the skills of the available work force, market trends, and economic considerations. In manufacturing industries, this requires activities such as the design of tools, dies, and fixtures; the specification of speeds and feeds for machine tools; and the specification of process recipes for chemical processes.

Actual production of physical products usually begins with a few prototype units being manufactured in research and development or design laboratories for evaluation by designers, the production engineering team, and sales and marketing personnel. The goal of this pilot phase is to give the production engineering team hands-on experience making the product, allowing problems to be identified and remedied before investing in additional production equipment or shipping defective products to the customer. The pilot production process involves changes to the product design and fine-tuning of unit manufacturing processes, work methods, production equipment, and materials to achieve an optimal trade-off between cost, functionality, and product quality and reliability. See also Pilot production; Prototype.

The production facility itself can be designed around the sequence of operations required by the product, referred to as a product layout. General-purpose production machinery is used, and often must be set up for each individual job, incurring significant changeover times while this takes place. This type of production facility is usually organized in a process layout, where equipment with similar functions is grouped together. See also Human-machine systems; Production methods.

The production engineering process does not stop once the product has been put into production. A major function of production engineering is continuous improvement—continually striving to eliminate inefficiencies in the system and to incorporate and advance the frontier of the best existing practice. The task of production engineering is to identify potential areas for improving the performance

13
deepanshu001 agarwal ·

i jus dunno ...whether i wnt CS tht desperately

which one is bttr

CS IIIT OR CIVIL IIT GUWAHATI

PPL PLZ HELP IT IS GONNA BE A RILI TUFF DECISION

13
deepanshu001 agarwal ·

Which field is that article related to???

1
kamalendu ghosh ·

that was for rahul who wanred to know abt Production engg.

look deepansh make up ur mind what do u want to do in future...... make up ur mind...
I too faced the same probs last year... after lots of thinking.... I decided on mech at NIT(cuz I wanted mech)......its totally ur call.... dont get swayed by general conventions like tp students shud take comp sc/eee only..... its just a convention....

1
jb6098 swathi ·

even a frnd of mine got 3000-4000 rank last ear he joined IIT Kanpur EEE DONT LOSE UR HOPE
best of luck

1
kamalendu ghosh ·

EEE at 4000 that too IIT KANPUR??? are u serious?

1
jb6098 swathi ·

s its true

1
kamalendu ghosh ·

SC/ST?

1
jb6098 swathi ·

OC

13
deepanshu001 agarwal ·

@kamal....which nit is it...??

i havnt heard abt nit s from nybody thou seeing the demand i think they must be at par wid iits ....

ny comment over nits......???

1
kamalendu ghosh ·

I am in NIT Trichy......... not at par actually.... but some like trichy, warangal , surathkal are exxcelent

13
deepanshu001 agarwal ·

kk...thnx...i ll surely consider tht bfr takin my final decision

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