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From Cutting Tool Engineering

Eyes wide open: General Industry Coverage

Several weeks ago, my wife and I attended a dinner party at her sister's home. One of the guests heard I was in manufacturing and introduced himself. He's 48, married and has five children and a mortgage. He's a pleasant individual, and we spoke about his trials and tribulations over the last few years.

March 15, 2013By Michael Deren

Several weeks ago, my wife and I attended a dinner party at her sister’s home. One of the guests heard I was in manufacturing and introduced himself. He’s 48, married and has five children and a mortgage. He’s a pleasant individual, and we spoke about his trials and tribulations over the last few years. He lost his job during the Great Recession and has since been struggling to find a steady job. Unemployment checks and odd jobs, as well as assistance from their church and friends, have helped his family muddle along. His experience is in customer service and sales.

The fellow had come to a hard realization that it was time for a career change. A friend of his told him about a state-assisted, 16-week CNC training program at a local school. He inquired about it and was admitted into the program. The estimated cost of the program is about $8,500 per student, but students invest nothing other than their time and the gas needed to get there. Upon or near completion of the program, students receive assistance in writing resumes and are referred to machine shops looking to hire them full-time, starting at $12 to $16 per hour.

During our conversation, I became concerned that some of these short-term vocational programs are not preparing students for the real world. Sure, they teach the requisite math, blueprint reading and G and M codes, but some important things seem to be missing.

Are these programs teaching any manual machining skills? Everything I heard about the 16-week program referred to CNCs. However, you learn basic setups on manual machines. The dinner guest asked me what I thought was the most important part of machining. When I said setups, his jaw dropped. Without a good setup, you’re dead in the water. You can understand the math and have the correct feeds and speeds, but if the part is not secure and the job repeatable, you’re going to produce a lot of scrap. The only milling fixture covered in the program was a vise, but more setups are created without a vise than with one.

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