I am looking to do a career change. I am looking into a 4 year program (90 cr hrs) vs. a 2 year program (30 cr hrs).
I am going to have to do this at night and work in the day.
I always felt there are no short cuts in anything but would like some advice from any machinist out there.
Cost on these programs are very different 3500.00 vs. 12,000.00.
Any opinions or advice would be appreciated.
Tim
Hey Tim,
slide down to Ridgefield and talk to Schurman Machine and IMW to see how the industry is doing around here. There are a couple shops near the junction that do light machining too. BTW I think Kap's is gone, if you do a search he's still listed but I think he quit.
Last I knew was a couple guys leaving the Ridgefield area headed for Seattle hoping that the bigger av shops were hiring/training. I don't mean to be a wet blanket but when I went to Gunsmithing School my thought was "I can always find a machine shop job.. I can make anything." But IMO now, that's just the start. To get paid well now you must
make something else that makes the part, or at least learn how to program ...... you must graduate to button pusher.
I married the daughter of a tool and die maker, a machinist of 50+yrs experience. This was in the Midwest, center of Industry. My father-in-law was "a machinist out of Detroit." Clear up into the 80's they were in high demand, Terex, Cal-Tech, Ford, Deere, Peterbuilt.... The 90's were slower, more money spent upgrading than money made as the industry was tapering into the new century. The "machining centers" seemed to be taking over.... program a card, drop in a billet of material and 56 operations later a finished part pops out...
The writing was on the wall. Hand work is OVER!
In the last few years they've completely gutted the shop, TONS of iron sent to scrap to be replaced by one laser cutter. It's now a material handling warehouse with one big machine and some brakes. Out here on the West Coast it's the same way. Just down the street in Brush Prairie (25min from you) was a huge machine shop.This guy set up next to the tracks to move big iron. He turned the mast and spars for the ship set in the movie "Master and Commander, on the Far Side of the Ocean." A friend of mine bought the shop for a construction warehouse and ended up selling train cars of perfectly good iron for weight.
I'm not making a judgement here, I don't see this as "bad" or "good" it just IS..... I caught the tail end of the hand-working era, the "machine shop" era. My gunsmithing teacher was Ferlach trained, a German from the Old country. I could and did make ANY type of part by hand. And I learned well. You give me a drill, a hacksaw and some files and sandpaper and I can turn out a perfectly fitted and machined part for any mo'chine on the planet, given time
But time is money, and what I DIDN'T know back when I was 'smithing was the worth of time and a dollar. I thought nothing of spending hours on a part for a hundred dollar gun. I hear talk of us being a "throw away society" but IMO we're just a RICH society filled with quality goods. It's no longer cost-effective to keep hobbling along with patched together junk. My microwave broke last week. Did I call a repairman??? NO! I listened to it, wiggled the door and then took it out to the trash pile and bought another better one for $80.00. It was far and away the cheapest route. Even cars last twice-three times as long as they did back in the day and then you chuck 'em...well, not quite but almost. You've really got to weight the costs VS buying another one.
IMO if you're gonna' be a machinist today you have to be prepared to train beyond hands-on.
I'm a hands on machinist.
I can swage.
I can peen.
I can knurl.
I can scrape.
I can cast parts.
I can forge parts.
I can hot weld and cold weld metal and stretch metal and stitch metal and temper and mold the stuff. I can machine it and grind it and polish it and fit it until it becomes a living thing, affected by its environment so that fit/no-fit depends on how much you handle it....... but so what. For me at my level it's a hobby.
If I was in jail for a year I could play a wicked guitar when I came out too
I'm just sayin'........
Check out the market before ya' spends the college money! Schools think absolutely NOTHING of taking your money to teach you outdated tech.
BTDT
Then again, As Jake says you do need the school to get in the door.....and you DO need to learn to handle the metal before you can punch the buttons..... As they say in construction, "you gotta' learn to run a shovel before you can get good on an excavator...."
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