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Will AI replace Engine and Other Machine Assemblers?

No single dataset says so — here is what the evidence actually measures.

There is no dataset that measures "replacement." What we can do is put three independent, published measurements next to each other for Engine and Other Machine Assemblers and let them stand on their own: how much of the work overlaps with what AI can do, what people who use AI in this job actually do with it today, and what the labor market is projected to do. None of these is a forecast of the role disappearing.

1. How much of the work overlaps with AI

Published exposure research places Engine and Other Machine Assemblers at a moderate exposure level (around the 37th percentile across all occupations). Exposure measures the share of tasks that overlap with current AI capabilities — it is not a measure of how many of those tasks will actually be automated, or on what timeline, or whether the role as a whole goes away. · AI assistant applicability (Microsoft)

A second, independent read agrees on the order of magnitude: the ILO's 2025 global study — scored on the international ISCO-08 system and bridged to Engine and Other Machine Assemblers through the published (approximate) O*NET-SOC crosswalk — places this work around the 49th percentile of 427 occupations, with about 27% of its tasks exposed. See the gradient →

2. What people actually do with AI here today

No observed-AI-use sample is published for this occupation.

Tasks more often handed to AI

Tasks where a human is still in the loop

3. What the labor market is projected to do

The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects employment for this occupation as declining (-21.1% over 2024–34) , with roughly 2,800 openings projected per year (growth plus replacement). A projection is a model of the labor market, made before AI's full effect is known — but it is the closest thing we have to an official outlook. · BLS Employment Projections

The skills that travel either way

Whatever AI does to the tasks, these are the highest-importance capabilities this work runs on — the ones worth deepening because they transfer across how the job evolves.

The honest bottom line

No single dataset says so — here is what the evidence actually measures. Exposure is task overlap, not a verdict. Observed use is a sample, not the whole workforce. The employment projection is a model, not a promise. They measure different things and they do not have to agree. Read them together, see the full Engine and Other Machine Assemblers profile for the underlying numbers, and draw your own conclusion.

People also ask

Sources for this page

Every figure above traces to a named public dataset and the exact release below — not hand-written opinion. See the full methodology for what each measure does and does not mean.

Data compiled June 2, 2026. Figures are estimates, not advice.

Cite this page
Plain

Singulariki. "Will AI replace Engine and Other Machine Assemblers?." Singulariki: a source-backed encyclopedia of work. Built from O*NET 30.3; BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) May 2024; BLS Employment Projections 2024–2034; Anthropic Economic Index v4 (2026-01-15) + v2 (2025-03-27); Microsoft “Working with AI” working-with-ai; “GPTs are GPTs” (Eloundou et al.) arXiv 2303.10130; AI Occupational Exposure (AIOE) Felten, Raj & Seamans; ILO / Gmyrek et al. GenAI exposure gradient 2025; IBS O*NET-SOC ↔ ISCO-08 occupation crosswalk 2022; Frey & Osborne (2013) frey-osborne-automation; Dingel & Neiman (2020) dingel-neiman-workathome. Accessed June 7, 2026. https://singulariki.com/questions/will-ai-replace-engine-and-other-machine-assemblers

APA

Singulariki. (2026). Will AI replace Engine and Other Machine Assemblers?. Singulariki: a source-backed encyclopedia of work. Retrieved June 7, 2026, from https://singulariki.com/questions/will-ai-replace-engine-and-other-machine-assemblers

BibTeX
@misc{singulariki-will-ai-replace-engine-and-other-machine-assemblers,
  title  = {Will AI replace Engine and Other Machine Assemblers?},
  author = {{Singulariki}},
  year   = {2026},
  note   = {O*NET 30.3; BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) May 2024; BLS Employment Projections 2024–2034; Anthropic Economic Index v4 (2026-01-15) + v2 (2025-03-27); Microsoft “Working with AI” working-with-ai; “GPTs are GPTs” (Eloundou et al.) arXiv 2303.10130; AI Occupational Exposure (AIOE) Felten, Raj & Seamans; ILO / Gmyrek et al. GenAI exposure gradient 2025; IBS O*NET-SOC ↔ ISCO-08 occupation crosswalk 2022; Frey & Osborne (2013) frey-osborne-automation; Dingel & Neiman (2020) dingel-neiman-workathome. Accessed June 7, 2026},
  url    = {https://singulariki.com/questions/will-ai-replace-engine-and-other-machine-assemblers}
}

Citations name the underlying public dataset releases — they reflect what this page is built from, not just the URL.