EdwardB
Well-known member
"Canon" would only train us if we paid to go to their training center in (I think it was) Newark NJ... We learned instead from our Techs.Had a virtual demo of the new Profisio, or whatever the name is now. Pretty much all standard stuff I expected, what I was surprised about was their offer to train our operators to do as much maintenance as possible. This is a huge in my opinion, the more we can do ourselves the more uptime we have. Konica was not willing to do that so we rely heavily on techs which leads to a fair bit of down time. Canon offers this in the US I believe and think this would be a wise move for any of the big players, train the operators who generally get to know the press as good or sometimes better then the techs themselves.
I feel that I'm the last of the "Maintenance Operators"... I've been told by multiple techs that none of their clients come close to the level that I maintain equipment. Back when I started in the Photo Finishing industry, I was manufacturer trained on how to repair/maintain Noritsu photo finishing equipment... it was expected of us as operators to be able to keep those $250k beasts running. 4 years in and it took someone physically breaking something on the machine for it to (technically) be beyond normal repairs, and even then I fixed it with a drill bit, roll pin, and epoxy. The part was a 8-week backorder from Japan... I was told about 10 years later that my repair was still working.
Now, I see "operators" that I want to hide any and all tools from... no one grasps simple things like "how a screw driver works", it's kind of flabbergasting.