James Burke
Being a grandpa is more fun than working
I guarantee you. Old school "manual machinists" are in very high demand these days....I had one company beg me to quit one job and go to work for them for $5 more per hour.I disagree. Shop and those sorts of vocational classes aren't really relevant today. The old ways of doing things are now hobbies. What's the point of teaching a kid to use a lathe when we have CNC machines and the majority of the products built in shop class are now made overseas? There's no point in teaching auto mechanics, it's going the same way. People don't tear down engines anymore or rebuild parts, you replace them. It's all computerized diagnostics and following steps. What about drafting when that too is computerized? You can't hang onto the past.
Mostly, it's in the area of tooling repair and one-offs that make a manual machinist valuable. Along with that, automatic screw machines and Swiss lathers are cam actuated (non-CNC) and still need technicians. Believe it or not...but some of those old mechanically actuated machines can run circles around a CNC machine when it comes to productivity.
Most of what we classify as CNC "machinists" are nothing more than operators (button pushers).
JB
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