I will be starting my new job as an operator at a chemical plant in Channelview next week. Any advice yall can offer me for a person who is transitioning from working as a chief engineer offshore to a new hire operator? What can I do to make myself an asset and not a burden to others? I know first impressions mean a lot and I want to make a good impression.
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Listen to what the experienced operators tell you, don't interrupt or act like you already know or have heard it before. Ask questions, don't assume something.
Stay off your phone and out of the control room unless you are training on something in there.
If something is going on in another area go help, even if you aren't training or trained in that area.
Help keep the control room clean and make your you clean up after yourself, don't leave dishes out or in the sink, if the trash can is close to being full take it out and put a new bag in.
Don't brown nose or be a story topper or know someone that has done it bigger and better.
Good luck, there may be a little hazing but take it in stride, they were all in your shoes when they started.
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Originally posted by Mofo View PostListen to what the experienced operators tell you, don't interrupt or act like you already know or have heard it before. Ask questions, don't assume something.
Stay off your phone and out of the control room unless you are training on something in there.
If something is going on in another area go help, even if you aren't training or trained in that area.
Help keep the control room clean and make your you clean up after yourself, don't leave dishes out or in the sink, if the trash can is close to being full take it out and put a new bag in.
Don't brown nose or be a story topper or know someone that has done it bigger and better.
Good luck, there may be a little hazing but take it in stride, they were all in your shoes when they started.
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Originally posted by Mofo View PostListen to what the experienced operators tell you, don't interrupt or act like you already know or have heard it before. Ask questions, don't assume something.
Stay off your phone and out of the control room unless you are training on something in there.
If something is going on in another area go help, even if you aren't training or trained in that area.
Help keep the control room clean and make your you clean up after yourself, don't leave dishes out or in the sink, if the trash can is close to being full take it out and put a new bag in.
Don't brown nose or be a story topper or know someone that has done it bigger and better.
Good luck, there may be a little hazing but take it in stride, they were all in your shoes when they started.
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Originally posted by LlanoHunter10 View PostI will be starting my new job as an operator at a chemical plant in Channelview next week. Any advice yall can offer me for a person who is transitioning from working as a chief engineer offshore to a new hire operator? What can I do to make myself an asset and not a burden to others? I know first impressions mean a lot and I want to make a good impression.
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Study P&IDs. Learn your pipe and flows. Learn about the how and what and why. Know the place inside out. DONT BE LAZY.
Probably don’t tell em you were an engineer
If you want to be the best it takes effort and dedication.
Take any training schools they offer. Study online. There’s a lot of material for distillation columns, heaters, boilers, amine systems, etc. Idk your specific plant but there will be plenty of literature about it. Use it. Know it.
Never completely trust your instrumentation. Don’t rely on that computer. Verify levels, temps, pressures locally when available. When trouble shooting keep it stupid simple.
9/10 operators aren’t good at it. They just keep it between the ditches. Be good enough to handle any situation and remain calm and you’ll go far.
Team work is important. One man can’t run the facility by himself. Work together. Learn together. Succeed together.
I love my job and what I do. It’s a solid career. You’ll make great money and should have plenty of time off. Congrats on the new job and enjoy it!Last edited by trophy8; 05-11-2021, 05:52 AM.
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Originally posted by trophy8 View PostStudy P&IDs. Learn your pipe and flows. Learn about the how and what and why. Know the place inside out. DONT BE LAZY.
Probably don’t tell em you were an engineer
If you want to be the best it takes effort and dedication.
Take any training schools they offer. Study online. There’s a lot of material for distillation columns, heaters, boilers, amine systems, etc. Idk your specific plant but there will be plenty of literature about it. Use it. Know it.
9/10 operators aren’t good at it. They just keep it between the ditches. Be good enough to handle any situation and remain calm and you’ll go far.
Team work is important. One man can’t run the facility by himself. Work together. Learn together. Succeed together.
I love my job and what I do. It’s a solid career. You’ll make great money and should have plenty of time off. Congrats on the new job and enjoy it!
Comment
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Originally posted by trophy8 View PostStudy P&IDs. Learn your pipe and flows. Learn about the how and what and why. Know the place inside out. DONT BE LAZY.
Probably don’t tell em you were an engineer
If you want to be the best it takes effort and dedication.
Take any training schools they offer. Study online. There’s a lot of material for distillation columns, heaters, boilers, amine systems, etc. Idk your specific plant but there will be plenty of literature about it. Use it. Know it.
Never completely trust your instrumentation. Don’t rely on that computer. Verify levels, temps, pressures locally when available. When trouble shooting keep it stupid simple.
9/10 operators aren’t good at it. They just keep it between the ditches. Be good enough to handle any situation and remain calm and you’ll go far.
Team work is important. One man can’t run the facility by himself. Work together. Learn together. Succeed together.
I love my job and what I do. It’s a solid career. You’ll make great money and should have plenty of time off. Congrats on the new job and enjoy it!Last edited by Jcjohnson; 05-11-2021, 06:11 AM.
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I've shared this with the OP through PM but I figured I'd share it here as well. It might help someone.
-God gave you 2 ears and 1 mouth. Do more listening than talking.
-No one cares how you used to do it at your last job. So keep those stories to a minimum.
-During your training if an operator gets up to go do somethings make sure you're in his back pocket.
-Get in good with the Old hands. Retain their knowledge, it's worth more than and procedure out there.
-Never stand there and let anyone open or close a long winded valve without your help.
-Utilize your downtime while training. Walk the unit, read a procedure, roll up hoses, etc etc.
-You'll see a lot of people sleeping but make sure you don't start sleeping or playing on your phone for at least the first year and/or until your qualified on a job.
I could go on and on.
But it's like I was told 13 years ago when I got in the industry.
"You can be a dumb but hardworking operator or a smart but lazy operator but you can't be dumb and lazy."Last edited by Hammerdown; 05-11-2021, 06:13 AM.
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