Industrial Maintenance Technician

  Instructor Team

 Jared Arnold, Tony Cooper, Mark Harris, James Moss

The Industrial Maintenance Technician program is designed to help meet the identified need for trained and skilled maintenance technicians. Incorporating classroom instruction and shop learning experience utilizing actual equipment and/or related training devices, the IMT program is designed in its entirely, primarily for the vocational student who is preparing for a career in industry. Notwithstanding, its flexibility is such that can be readily segmented to provided specialized training for maintenance persons presently employed. Additionally, program "trimming and tailoring" can provide abbreviated concept, theory, and capabilities training; often beneficial for production personnel.

Introduction

Basic Skills

Electrical Maintenance

  • Safety
  • D. C. Fundamentals
  • D. C. Circuit Analysis
  • Solid-State Fundamentals
  • A. C. Fundamentals
  • A. C. Circuit Analysis
  • Solid-State Controls
  • Basic Digital Fundamentals

Electrical Motors

  • Shop Safety
  • Electrical Motors, Fundamentals
  • Electrical Motors, Types
  • Electrical Motors, Controls
  • Electrical Motors, Schematics

Heating and Air

  • Heating and Air, Fundamentals
  • Cooling
  • Heat Pump
  • Electrical Resistance Heat
  • Gas Heat
  • Schematics, Heating and Air

 

 

Machine Shop
  • Mathematics
  • Blueprints Reading
  • Shop Theory
  • Methods of Precision Layouts
  • Measuring Tools
  • Basic Machine Shop Practices
  • CNC Theory

Welding

  • Welding Safety
  • Oxy-acetylene Welding
  • Shielded Metal Arc Welding
  • Gas Metal & Tungsten Arc Welding
  • Shop Practices

Motor Controls

  • Safety
  • Electro-Magnetic Control of Industrial Motors

Fluid Power

Basic Pneumatics

  • Basic Hydraulics
  • Electrical Control of Fluid Power

PLC’s

  • Programmable Logic Controllers

Home

Copyright © 1997 Tennessee Technology Center at Whiteville
Last modified: October 17, 2008