WARRIORWELDING
Owner opperator Of WarriorWelding LLC.
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2008
- Location
- Chillin, Hwy 64 Mocksville NC
Not bashing engineers in general, but I am gonna be in a predicament.
Plant hired a Continuous Improvement position and a Engineer (he is mechanical and slated as our manufacturing engineer). "We" in Maintenance all suspect he's replacing the Manager of our dept.
Neither are attempting to get to know any of the characteristics, talents, or knowledge of our group. Our group will be the foot soldiers for these new officers.
Both have been in house less than two months. Both have "ideas" and have started applying a lot of theory and avenues of improvement.
Neither can operate or understand the full scope of the production and equipment. Neither are asking much in terms of learning from anyone.
Both have been caught changing plc code and reaping havoc on the line causing "oddities" and a few flat out problems making bad product.
Our Plant Manager demands changes that we have previous discussed and explained that flat don't work. He doesn't understand the equipment either, just production numbers.
I am the only fabricator and get slated with modifications. Our machines are heavy mechanical. I also understand the characteristics of the machines very well.
Neither men are asking any questions of me. They are pushing to make things happen.
Flat refusing isn't gonna cut it. The first project was all ideas and request. No blue prints. "Make it work"!?!
What say y'all?
A good example of input....
"We need to speed up said unit. We want to load a days worth of widgets into the magazine." The magazine gets loaded with little sheet metal squares 5 to 6 Times a day. "No biggy, but we could do it once!?" Oh yes, the stack would be 6 foot tall and weight 300 lbs. Mind you we separated 1 at a time and they are maybe 20gauge thick. This is done in a sliding tray feeder, which needs regular cleaning, has a tool steel stripper that I have set tolerance to less than .015.....oh just let me undoad this few hundred pounds of steel.
The unit is also light curtain and fence protected......"so let's use a step ladder"............apparently I not supposed to say: high speed retard out loud.
I'm not overly ego driven, I want to do really good work. If that work leads to improvements I am all for it. BTW the described machine was a mess when I started. I have since rebuilt and basicly blue printed the fit and tolerances of the unit. I made specific changes to several factors to get it to jam less and run daily for weeks with minor tune ups. I know the machine. I get zero questions or input.
Plant hired a Continuous Improvement position and a Engineer (he is mechanical and slated as our manufacturing engineer). "We" in Maintenance all suspect he's replacing the Manager of our dept.
Neither are attempting to get to know any of the characteristics, talents, or knowledge of our group. Our group will be the foot soldiers for these new officers.
Both have been in house less than two months. Both have "ideas" and have started applying a lot of theory and avenues of improvement.
Neither can operate or understand the full scope of the production and equipment. Neither are asking much in terms of learning from anyone.
Both have been caught changing plc code and reaping havoc on the line causing "oddities" and a few flat out problems making bad product.
Our Plant Manager demands changes that we have previous discussed and explained that flat don't work. He doesn't understand the equipment either, just production numbers.
I am the only fabricator and get slated with modifications. Our machines are heavy mechanical. I also understand the characteristics of the machines very well.
Neither men are asking any questions of me. They are pushing to make things happen.
Flat refusing isn't gonna cut it. The first project was all ideas and request. No blue prints. "Make it work"!?!
What say y'all?
A good example of input....
"We need to speed up said unit. We want to load a days worth of widgets into the magazine." The magazine gets loaded with little sheet metal squares 5 to 6 Times a day. "No biggy, but we could do it once!?" Oh yes, the stack would be 6 foot tall and weight 300 lbs. Mind you we separated 1 at a time and they are maybe 20gauge thick. This is done in a sliding tray feeder, which needs regular cleaning, has a tool steel stripper that I have set tolerance to less than .015.....oh just let me undoad this few hundred pounds of steel.
The unit is also light curtain and fence protected......"so let's use a step ladder"............apparently I not supposed to say: high speed retard out loud.
I'm not overly ego driven, I want to do really good work. If that work leads to improvements I am all for it. BTW the described machine was a mess when I started. I have since rebuilt and basicly blue printed the fit and tolerances of the unit. I made specific changes to several factors to get it to jam less and run daily for weeks with minor tune ups. I know the machine. I get zero questions or input.


