MadScientistMatt said:
Nick Comstock said:
I don't think I want to go back to what I did before. I would just love to have some of those good attributes in my work. I don't think I'd make a good entrepreneur, I'm just not wired that way. I like to think I make a good soldier but I need marching orders.
On the subject of what I would like to do. We are in the process of getting a new waterjet installed at work. Last week I disassembled and removed the old machine and moved the major pieces of the new machine into place. I really enjoyed that. The guys from the company are here now getting everything setup and calibrated. I could see myself doing that type of work. I have no idea what type of qualifications are required but that kinda is what spurred me to make this thread. I think something like that is what I should be doing.
My advice there would be to look up machine tool manufacturers and see if they have any openings posted; check back regularly. I used to work for a machine tool company myself (Amada), but the crew I was with stayed at one of the tech centers and only went out on installation work with new or experimental components. The regular installation guys were assigned a particular region, but there is a lot of travel. Smaller, high sales volume machine tools might have a better odds of getting you home most days, though.
The suggestion of "split the difference between factory and construction work - be a maintenance technician" sounds like it could work, too.
Yep, machine tool people would snatch someone like you up in a heartbeat. I'm in the manufacturing business, and a lot of those guys need people to deliver and setup machinery. Talking to the waterjet guys would be a great start, but some other names to know and find your local reseller are Haas, Okuma, Mazak, Matsuura, Thermwood, etc. Email me if you want more suggestions.
I don't think it's possible to truly divest yourself from work & home as far as an overall person, since you spend 8+ hours a day doing it, 5 days a week. Depending on how your pay is now, perhaps look at a career change? Obviously I'm biased, but machining/CAM offers something you might be interested in. A job comes in, it's up to you to figure out how to turn the chunk of material into a finished product using the machinery available. There's an obvious path to progression (start with a machinist program at the local tech school > get hired as a operator > learn trade > come setup guy > learn basic machining > start some CAM/Programming > 3, 4 then 5 axis machining > $100k/yr+, and that's not even counting the robotics side!) and there's ALWAYS a challenge and at the end of the day, you've made a part that means something to someone! How do I hold this part? How can I machine this feature? What's unique about this material that I need X type cutters?, etc.
If you get bored of the trajectory, you can always jump ship to those machinery guys I was talking about before, where you'd be an Applications Engineer. There'll be travel, but you basically go around to customers of that company and help them program tricky parts and set up production lines.
The other path would be through CMM/inspection once you know how stuff is made.
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On a personal note, a lot of us in the office go through this, because we used to be machinists and application guys. We used to help a customer or complete an order and the part went away and we felt accomplished. Now we're writing software and what someone said about office work being an endless treadmill is definitely correct. There's always more to do and you can't ever empty the inbox. I'm just lucky that I'm actually making a difference in customers' lives and have a bit of control of my area of the software, so it's not a grind. If I wasn't, it would be soulcrushing.