Cohort starts 12 Apr
A Complete Course on NDT Training I & II
- Session recordings included
- Certificate of completion
- Anytime Learning
- Learn from Industry Expert
Is this course for you?
You should take this if
- You work in Aerospace or Energy & Utilities
- You're a Metallurgy & Material Science professional
- You have 3+ years of hands-on experience in this field
- You prefer live, instructor-led training with Q&A
You should skip if
- You're new to this field with no prior experience
- You need a different specialisation outside Metallurgy & Material Science
- You need fully self-paced, on-demand content
Course details
Course suitable for
Key topics covered
Opportunities that await you!
Career opportunities
Training details
This is a live course that has a scheduled start date.
Live session
Starts
Sat, Apr 12, 2025
Duration
2 hours per day
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Why people choose EveryEng
Industry-aligned courses, expert training, hands-on learning, recognized certifications, and job opportunities-all in a flexible and supportive environment.
What learners say about this course
Coming into this course, I had some prior exposure to the subject, mostly from reviewing weld callouts on drawings rather than living in the code itself. The AWS D1.1 walkthrough helped close that gap, especially around preheat requirements, WPS/PQR relationships, and what inspectors actually look for on fillet weld sizes and discontinuities. One useful angle was tying structural steel practices back to things I’ve seen in automotive and aerospace work. Fatigue behavior around weld toes and heat-affected zones came up in a way that felt familiar from aerospace fatigue life discussions. On the automotive side, the emphasis on repeatability and visual acceptance criteria lined up well with robotic welding quality checks and crash structure integrity. The biggest challenge was getting comfortable navigating D1.1 tables quickly. It’s not intuitive at first, and I had to slow down to understand how base metal groupings and thickness drive requirements. A practical takeaway was a clearer method for reviewing shop drawings and verifying weld symbols against code limits before fabrication starts. That alone saves rework. The content felt aligned with practical engineering demands.
At first glance, the topics looked familiar, but the depth surprised me. The breakdown of metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites went beyond textbook definitions and actually touched on why certain classes survive in real systems. From an aerospace perspective, the discussion around high‑temperature alloys and composite behavior tied directly into creep limits and delamination risks seen in flight hardware. On the automotive side, the contrast between steels, aluminum alloys, and polymers made sense when viewed through crashworthiness, corrosion resistance, and cost constraints. One challenge was keeping the theory aligned with practice at a beginner pace. Some sections on thermodynamics and structural evolution moved quickly, and mapping that to actual material specs or standards took extra effort. That said, edge cases like brittle ceramics in impact environments or polymers aging under heat cycles were acknowledged, which is often skipped in entry‑level material courses. A practical takeaway was the structured way of thinking about material selection—starting from functional requirements, then narrowing options based on properties, processing limits, and system‑level implications. That mindset mirrors how materials are chosen in industry reviews, not just in classrooms. It definitely strengthened my technical clarity.
At first glance, the topics looked familiar, but the depth surprised me. Coming from an automotive background with some crossover into aerospace projects, the breakdown of metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites helped clear up gaps that tend to get glossed over on the job. The sections on aluminum alloys versus fiber‑reinforced composites were especially useful, since those choices come up often when balancing weight, fatigue life, and cost in both vehicle structures and aircraft components. One challenge was getting through the thermodynamics and structural evolution parts. The theory is dense, and it took a second pass to connect phase diagrams and property changes back to real manufacturing decisions. That said, working through those examples made the trade‑offs clearer, especially around heat treatment and temperature limits. A practical takeaway was the structured approach to material selection. Using property requirements instead of defaulting to “what we used last time” is something that translated immediately to a current automotive bracket redesign. The course filled a knowledge gap between classroom material science and day‑to‑day engineering decisions. The content felt aligned with practical engineering demands.
Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course. As someone working in automotive product development with some exposure to aerospace suppliers, the basics of material classification sounded a bit academic. That said, the way metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites were compared actually filled a gap I’ve had for a while, especially around why certain aluminum alloys show up in aerospace structures while high-strength steels and polymers dominate automotive crash components. One challenge was getting through the thermodynamics and structural evolution sections without examples at first. It took a bit of effort to connect phase behavior to real decisions like heat treatment selection or fatigue performance. Once that clicked, the content became more useful. A practical takeaway was a clearer framework for material selection instead of relying on legacy specs. The discussion around property trade-offs helped during a recent bracket redesign where weight, stiffness, and manufacturability were all pulling in different directions. It also clarified why some ceramic options are great on paper but risky in vibration-heavy environments. The course didn’t try to oversell anything, which I appreciated. I can see this being useful in long-term project work.