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Old 02-23-2008, 10:53 AM
 
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What schools teach machining?

I have a younger brother who is about to graduate high school. He wants to learn to become a machinist and program CNC machines. It's very hard to find schools that actually teach this stuff.

Does anybody know of any schools in the northeast that teach or specialize in machinist trade?

I have seen some county colleges offer basic machining courses which teach you the fundamentals of manual machines, such as turning, milling and grinding. But the machines they use are very outdated, manual, and really don't offer much in the way of CNC machines. I would like to find a school that uses more up to date machines so my brother can learn the trade to eventually open up his own machine shop.

My family owns a business in which we design and sell parts to large companies so we always are farming out machine work to different shops.. we don't do production, we do all custom onesy twosy type of jobs.
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Old 02-23-2008, 09:02 PM
 
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Com college should help with the basics wich you need before CNC Math skill's are a must espicaly Trig if your going to do CNC Cad program's make people lazy simple drafting skills are also helpfull You need to know how to make chip's by hand first I think Wyotec has a machinest program and a campus in the east the millwright union aprentis program might be an option also It also help's I one likes the work and want's to do it get him looking around on this site and see if he likes what he sees Good luck Kevin
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Old 02-24-2008, 02:05 PM
 
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No Wyoteck only does like automotive mechanic and stuff like that.. not machinist courses.
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Old 02-24-2008, 03:17 PM
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In Oklahoma you can find Vo-tech schools that still teach cnc classes. Granted some only have older BP type machines without tool changers.

Our state uni has an ext. in Okmulgee, Ok that has a lot of stuff.
http://www.osu-okmulgee.edu/academic...manufacturing/

Course of study:
http://www.osu-okmulgee.edu/academic...n_of_study.php

I did a few google searches for a few different states and got listings.

Later,
Jack
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Old 02-25-2008, 05:57 PM
 
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http://www.edref.com/college-degrees...-and-machinist
http://www.uscollegesearch.org/machi...-colleges.html
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Old 02-26-2008, 09:38 PM
 
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Originally Posted by Kevin Taylor View Post
Com college should help with the basics wich you need before CNC Math skill's are a must espicaly Trig if your going to do CNC
Don't worry about spelling, reading or writing.

Originally Posted by Kevin Taylor View Post
Cad program's make people lazy
...and money

Originally Posted by Kevin Taylor View Post
You need to know how to make chip's by hand first
There's one for Mythbusters.

Originally Posted by Kevin Taylor View Post
machinest
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Old 02-27-2008, 02:11 PM
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Hapsmo...your going to feel real bad when you learn that guy is dislexic. He writes just like my old college roomate, who was dislexic, and is now a high school teacher. Although I have to admit he's a big fan of the apostrophe, but not so much on any other puncuation mark. Anyway I gained all my experience on CNC's without making a chip manually. I've programmed at the control and now on a CAD/CAM system. I'm definitely not lazy, busy, but not lazy.
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Old 02-27-2008, 11:25 PM
 
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I apologize Kevin,.... and please,.....go ahead and
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Old 02-28-2008, 12:38 AM
 
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well, lets try to bring this post back to its original topic. I would suggest trying Lansing Community College in Michigan. They have a New (huge) shop full of New Hass machines. They have courses ranging from beginner to advanced. They also had cad/cam classes as well. I enjoyed my time there. the faculty is great.
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Old 03-10-2008, 12:36 PM
 
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squale,

I would suggest pulling up all the college websites and getting the course guides and taking a look. I'm thinking community/junior colleges are more geared towards machining and 4-year schools will be focused on engineering.

Not sure if you want out of state or not, but I'm in Michigan and I've taken machining at Mott Community College. There shop is all manual machines.

I've also gone to Macomb Community College and they have a HAAS setup that sounds like the LCC one described just above. Between each school Macomb had a much better setup, but they were partnered with HAAS so it's a given.

They also have classes in ArtCAM which is how I found them. I think it really depends if your brother plans to go out of state. Or where he lives.

It's really just a matter of looking at school sites and then take a trip. Talk to previous students and the teachers etc. If he's that serious he MAY want to look into Mechanical Engineering.

As for learning you can probably find simulation software as a lot of this stuff can be self taught. Oh besides this site, there is a magazine called Digital Machinist which is pretty good.

There are also videos about machining around on the Internet as well.

-Matt
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Old 03-11-2008, 05:22 AM
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Originally Posted by Kevin Taylor View Post
Cad program's make people lazy

Then you will either be a button pusher or starve to death.
You can't do what I do without CAD/CAM



Tell your brother goto school for atleast an associates in engineering, take as much CAD and math as he can and get a job in a machine shop while he's in school. Even if he starts his carrer sweeping floors, he will be pulled through the ranks even with just an associates in engineering. And don't work for yourself, make life easy.
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Old 05-09-2010, 09:46 AM
 
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Machining Schools

Here is a program that offers machining and welding programs in Pittsburgh, PA It is called Manufacturing 2000

http://www.ncsquared.com/

Greg
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