Strahan
Senior Member
- Location
- Watsontown, PA
What a timely thread.....
Just yesterday, I had a work order to help a plant electrician troubleshoot a problem. You know who that plant electrician was? A former apprenticeship teacher who taught class the same time I went through school. I only recently turned out 6 mos. ago and thought how odd it was(and scary too), that I was showing the teacher how to troubleshoot.....
It's probably a good thing that I learned my troubleshooting skills outside of the classroom.
What I notice, is that it seems some people have the hardest time grasping the 'divide and conquer' method to troubleshooting. They start jumping around testing different parts of the circuit instead of doing it systematically and then can't remember exactly all they've checked so far.....
Very true troubleshooting can't be taught in the classroom and someone with good troubleshooting skills is hard to find. I see the state of confusion all the time most of the time the "electrician" causes this himself by getting worked up and flying all over the place. As in my original post the motor was connected to a drive that kept faulting out even if you have the slightest clue as to what is going on common sense should tell you to disconnect the load wires from the drive and see if it runs if it does wiring or motor problem if it still faults then a drive problem if it is a drive problem then I would expect to recieve a call (drive is on a device-net network). But I guess the key words would be common sense!