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Visitor
JoeDirt

How to become an operator?

I'm ready to get started as an operator and would like to know how others got there start. I've had some experience with my uncles biz and really like it. But don't know what to do next. Anyone else want to share their story? Should I go to school or other training? Did you go to school? What did they cover in the classes? How well did it prepare you for your first job? If you could do it all over would you still take the school route? Same school?

Visitor
Growser

Re: How to become an operator?

In order to be an operator, you will have to be a laborer first, which means you will do the grunt work, toiling 12 hour days, getting sun burnt and getting yelled at, a lot. Get a job laboring at a construction company, make sure they do stuff that involves heavy equipment, ie, excavating, road building, demolition, water/sewer install and repair. I can pretty much gaurantee you won't be on a piece of equipment for at least 1 year from when you start. You won't be on any equipment until they are able to trust you, meaning you can do repetitive hard work consistently without complaint, you show up ready and work all day, and you hardly ever lose or break anything. *Your new best friend will be a round mouth shovel, and you will use it all the time.

 

Be consistent, be reliable, and always be ready to work, that includes weekends, saturday and sunday. IF YOU DON;T KNOW SOMETHING, ASK. DON'T!!!!! go to school, its a waste of your time and especially your money, you don't learn anything and employers hate seeing it on a resume because they know that you expect that  your going to get on a machine straight away when that is obviously not the case. *Resumes that have that on them get thrown out! 

 

Take what you can get, even little stuff like moving a skidsteer from one place to another is better than nothing, it will seem like forever before you get on the equipment, tough it out for a couple years and it will get easier, keep a positive attitude. Learn how to take crap, because you will get a lot of it. Get used to getting yelled at. * A good way to fast track your equipment expirience is snow removal, its an easy job, and they always need people to do it. Anyway take my advice for what its worth, if you do it this way, and you don't stuck it out, you will have at least learned the value of hard work

 

P.S. Any farm expirience is worth gold, employers always take those resumes and put them on the "keep" pile, ( I know it sure helped me out a lot), as heavy equipement and farm equipment are very similar.  - Good luck - Cal

Visitor
Sawerewolf

Re: How to become an operator?

Hiya. I myself am a TLB operator on the CAT 424D with just over 3 and a half yrs experience. I was lucky actually. My dad did subcontracting work as a carpenter for a home building contractor and when the contractor decided to buy his own TLB, my dad told me about it. I had then had absolutely no experience at all, either in operating heavy equipment or even in the construction field. I'd been doing security work at the time and before that been in the military. However, when my dad told me about the contractor wanting to buy a TLB and requiring an operator, I went for an interview. I told him straight out that I have no experience and never even seen what a TLB looks like inside, but that I am willing to learn. Well.... I got the job. They arranged for a trainer from the local CAT dealer to show me the ropes. Nowadays their training consists of a week's theoretical training plus another week or two of practical and exams. But in my case back then, the trainer showed me what levers and buttons did what and then he showed me a few things more. He let me practice some of this while he was with me. The original arrangement was that he would train me for a week. However, on the second day at lunchtime he told my boss that he showed me all he can and that I must now just practice it on the job. Then he buggered off. Through this practice on the job, and all the combined experience since then, I've earned the reputation as being one of the best operators in the area. My point is you dont necessarily need to go to a school but your main training ground will be out in the field on the job, for which NO school can prepare you. Practice, practice, practice and more practice. Thats the name of the game. Learn from your mistakes. And as the other user said, dont be afraid to ask questions if you're unsure about something. Rather ask questions and admit to not knowing than not asking and making terribly big mistakes which can screw up the job and your career or which can cause injuries or death to yourself or others. Sorry for this long reply though. I tend to talk alot when explaining things. Cheers!
Regular Visitor

Re: How to become an operator?

I started out as a labourer. A company was building road near me so I went out to the job site every morning for over 2 weeks ready to work and asked the super if he had room for me. When he said no I hung out for as long as I could picking his brain about what was going on. Eventually one morning he just laughed at me when I walked up, pointed at a shovel and a big multi plate that was going in and said "go help those guys out".

 

I spent the rest of the summer 12-14 hours a day working my but off. I paid attention to everything that was going on and when I had nothing to do I found something to do. When the other laborers were leaning on their shovels I went and offered the mechanics, surveyors or anyone else that was around a hand and learned what I could from them. If they had nothing for me to do I would go clean out the service trailer or find something else to do.

 

As well every chance I got to hop on a parked machine I did. Every break if there was a machine near me I would ask the Operator (after clearing it with the boss) if I could work it through the break. With most Operators if you have a good attitude they are happy to teach and you will get a good reception if you ask questions and listen more than you talk. I know myself I have helped many people bust in. If it is someone with a good attitude that really wants to learn I enjoy teaching ALMOST as much as I enjoy learning.

 

Before long I was getting time in on the 815 (packer) and then the 966 loader and then one day one of the Dozer Operators quit, it was an old D8K. The fan blades were seized on suck, (blowing the engine heat at the cab) it was stupid hot out and he got tired of hearing parts were on the way. So I got my shot pushing 627's through the mud and Dozing dirt. I ran it that way for over 2 weeks in the heat. I didn't care though, I was happy to have it. When the parts finally arrived the owner himself brought them out and asked the super if he should hire a new Operator for it now. He said only if you want to be the one to go and tell Brian your taking it away from him now LOL he is doing OK on it. So I got to keep it and the next job the company bought 4 next to new 631's and a 9L to push them. Was I ever a happy kid!

Visitor
ericla

Re: How to become an operator?

Even if you have to do some time on the shovel, etc., the school will be invaluable.  Many employers won't work you with out certification on certain equipment.  You'll also learn critical operational and safety information that you won't get in a 2 hour speach offered by the guy who has been operatiing for 20 years.  He's got the knowledge but there is no way he's going to be able to articulate it like you'll get in the class or through a field course.  The safety stuff speaks for itself - it may save your life or someone elses.  The operational stuff may keep you on the job by not burning an engine or damaging the gear.  Having the certification in hand, the learning OTJ will make you a far more valuable operator.
Regular Visitor

Re: How to become an operator?

I agree, you can not learn to be an Operator from a couple hour speech no matter who is giving the speech. But that is not how starting at the bottom and working your way up learning on the job works. You start on a shovel, spend some time learning grades, helping mechanics and service people and generally learning the ropes and how things are done. You participate in all the safety meetings, you interact every day on the job with knowledgeable people that guide you and when you are ready move up to a piece of slow moving support equipment like a packer. Once you have done your time on it and an opening comes up you move up to a bigger machine. Even then you are not just given a speech and turned loose with the machine. You are often teamed up with an experienced Operator and even when you are in the cab alone you are not really alone. There is constant radio contact available for every one on the job site. Everyone you are working with knows who the new Operators are and watch them. Guaranteed if you are doing something wrong or not operating safely someone will straighten you out or send you home.

 

As it is right now very few employers actually require certification and even those that do, experience trumps the certification in most cases. A season laboring with a few weeks operating experience at the end of the season will go a lot farther on your resume than a certificate you got from 6 weeks in school.

 

I am not saying that school is a bad thing, it's not. In fact I would really like to be an instructor at one of those schools and believe that eventually a trade certificate will be required by law to be an Operator on any machine. If you have the money to do it or a guaranteed job after school, go for it. But if you are like the average person and that is big dollars to you then go learn on the job and get paid for your education. If you do decide to go the school rout I suggest talking to potential employers first. Go to the people you want to work for, tell them what school you are considering and ask about your chances of getting hired after you finish. Also try and find other people that have already attended that school and see how it worked out for them. There are a few really good schools out there but there are also a lot of not so good ones. I have worked with several people that went to school to be an Operator and say if they could do it over they would not waste the time and money on it. It did not help them get a job and once they got on the job what they learned helped them very little. I have worked with others that said the schooling did not help them get a job but what they learned did help them once they got a job. So just be sure and do your research first and make sure you find one of the good schools. 

Visitor
ericla

Re: How to become an operator?

It hasn't been just a few times that I guy has told me he can operate, then spends the next 20 minutes in the cab trying to figure out how to start the beast.  Then they get going and spend the next hour hammering themselves and equipment.  Not the norm, but happens often enough.  Some schooling may help you not make a fool of yourself.  I'm not saying the certificate will get you the job, but it may and it probably will put you on the short list of who's next to give a chance.  Don't oversell the certificate because you're still going to need a lot of OTJ experience before you're competent and before the other guys/gals on the job trust you.  There isn't a lot of work out there now so its a great time to be going to school, especially since it might give you the edge on getting the next openning for laborer!  Good luck and I don't necessarily disagree with you Brian, but some class time just might help him keep the job when he gets the chance.
Visitor
John0392

Re: How to become an operator?

Joedirt,

 

    One way to become a skilled respected operator is by enrolling into a apprenticeship program at a International Union of operating Engineers local training center. These programs are located throughout the US & Canada and take new apprentices at times depending on local needs and regulations. These programs are managed by trusties appointed by the Operating Engineers and conpany managers respresenting the constructions companies that employ Operating Engineers members.

 

The programs are regulated by the US Department of labor and your only costs are becoming a member of the Operaing Engineers local where the training program is located. These are 3-4 year programs where you recieve specified training at the training site on all types of construction equipment from large cranes to a good ole Cat D7H.

 

Contractors who employ Operating Engineers construct some of the largest projects in the US, like the Hoover Dam and provide Operators for the tar Sands Mine in Canada. During your training, you must develope skills that make you "Simply the Best"

 

Look in the phone book where you live or go to this website for further information!  www.iuoe.org  

New member
Kupawater

Re: How to become an operator?

Everybody has given you some really valuable pieces of advice here but at the end of the day its what you do that works that counts. Learning to become and operator takes a little of what everybody said basically. Then it's what you put into it yourself, If you think school is a way to go then go that way, if you think that learning from the trenches is what you need to do then cool that try that as well. Hey you can always rent your own equipment and practice that as well it all depends on what kind of finances you have to work with which way you ultimately decide to go. But going to school and renting your own equipment to practice what you learned it just a way to feel a little bit more comfortable operating the equipment if you don't have any other access to it. You don't want to get on the job and be trying to learn while someone is paying you to be a professional or to keep a pace that will ultimately cost somebody money and you a job. So if you can get access to equipment like anything else rent it first to learn each piece of equipment you want to operate for someone hone those skills you learn from reading the manuals on how to operate the equipment as well as any schooling you have or lessons you've learned from instructions about it. Then put all that together and you can possibly get someone to give you a shot at the big show but until you get there practice, practice, practice, listen, learn and oh yeah ask plenty of questions of the manufacture, the sales folks, the rental folks whomever knows more about it than you do. They will be more than happy to assist you since you would be a customer of there's and answering questions is apart of their job so fire away! Not the most conventional way to become what you seek to become but whoever said there was only one way to do it.

Visitor
Midnight

Re: How to become an operator?

There has been some very sound advise given in the previous posts...remember, wether it is on-the-job-training or a formal class setting, nothing you learn can ever be taken away from you.  The "pool" of people that the construction industry can draw from has shrunk severely over the years.  Most construction companies know the day-to-day value of a good operator(with the exception of the "bean counters")(no offense to all the CPAs' out there)  Job supers value someone who knows what they are doing and takes pride and care of the equipment they run....it saves on wear and tear, downtime and lost production...so do what you feel will help you be "one of the best"  Good luck!