A good friend of mine works at a local machine shop that builds items for mostly the drilling industry. He says the machinists don't know how to use the tools and equipment, so a lot of machines end up getting broke. So they usually have to revert back to using the old, simpler machines. Production slows down. He says they don't know how to maintain the equipment, so the machines end up breaking and then the repair bills are high.
2 or 3 of the machinists/welders spend half the day trying to look busy, he says. Then he's low man on the totem pole, and s--t runs downhill, as they say, so he often gets unfairly blamed for the slowdowns. He doesn't even operate those machines, but he's blamed for breaking them. They are slow in getting him the parts he needs to do his end of the work, so they tell the boss they're waiting for him.
Sounds like a s--t show. I asked if they had manuals for the various machines so they can learn to use them. Nope. Nothing. I offered to download manuals off the internet for them. I'd have to go there and get the model #'s first. Do "quick start" type manuals exist for machine shop equipment?
2 or 3 of the machinists/welders spend half the day trying to look busy, he says. Then he's low man on the totem pole, and s--t runs downhill, as they say, so he often gets unfairly blamed for the slowdowns. He doesn't even operate those machines, but he's blamed for breaking them. They are slow in getting him the parts he needs to do his end of the work, so they tell the boss they're waiting for him.
Sounds like a s--t show. I asked if they had manuals for the various machines so they can learn to use them. Nope. Nothing. I offered to download manuals off the internet for them. I'd have to go there and get the model #'s first. Do "quick start" type manuals exist for machine shop equipment?
Last edited:
