|
JOINT APPRENTICE AND TRAINING COMMITTEE
SHEET METAL WORKERS - LOCAL UNION 28
Organization Directory Page
The Joint Apprentice and Training Committee of Sheet Metal Workers Local 28
operates a training program for men and women who wish to become
Journeyperson Sheet Metal Workers.
These Journeyperson Sheet Metal Workers are responsible for the drafting,
shop fabrication, field installation and maintenance of all types of
heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems and all types of
architectural sheet metal fabrication and installation in residential,
commercial and industrial buildings in the five boroughs of New York City
and Nassau/Suffolk Counties on Long Island.
Each candidate for apprenticeship is required to successfully complete a
240 hour six week pre-indenture course of study prior to their indenture
as apprentices. Individuals indentured into the Apprentice Program must
attend Related Training Classes for a period of four years for 160 hours
per year. Courses are designed to sequentially improve the apprentices’
skill levels in math, drafting, blueprint reading, shop layout and
fabrication, and welding. All apprentices are required to pass a
competency test for each year of training before moving on to the next
level.
Source of official student
records: Administrator, Joint Apprentice and Training Center of the
Sheet Metal Workers Local 28, 139-20 Jamaica Avenue, Jamaica, New York
11435.
Titles
of all evaluated learning experiences
Sheet
Metal Apprenticeship and Related Instruction
Descriptions
and credit recommendations
Sheet
Metal Apprenticeship and Related Instruction
Location: 139-10 Jamaica Avenue, Jamaica, NY.
Length: Version 1: 640 hours (160 hours per year, one 40 hour week
every three months). Version 2, 3 or 4: 880 hours (240 hours of
pre-indenture training, 40 hours per week over 6 weeks; 640 hours of
apprenticeship training, 160 hours per year, one 40 hour week every three
months).
Dates: Version 1: August 1988 - January 1997. Version 2:
February 1993 - August 1998. Version 3: September 1998 - August
2002. Version 4: August 2003 - Present.
Objectives: Version 1, 2, 3 or 4: Perform all duties of a
journey person sheet metal worker; shop tasks include layout, fabrication,
assembly, welding, and soldering; field work tasks include blueprint
reading, and installation of duct work, dampers, control devices, and
architectural sheet metal.
Instruction: Version 1 or 2: Drafting: Linework;
lettering; geometric constructions; orthographic projections; elevations;
shop drawings; single line drawings; job sketching (by computer);
introduction to Versacad. HVAC systems: Duct systems; central air
conditioning equipment; electromechanical devices; control systems; HVAC
systems; properties of air; refrigeration cycle; heat load and cooling
load calculations; testing and balancing. Industrial safety: Shop
safety considerations; material handling; federal safety standards; Red
Cross CPR/First Aid training. Print reading: Architectural plans;
electrical plans; structural drawings; mechanical drawings; sheet metal
drawings; plan-elevation-sections. Sheet metal working and
installation: Shop equipment; materials; hand tools; soldering; shop
fabrication procedures; safe shop practices; power equipment; laying out
patterns and fabrication of ducts, elbows, transitions, offsets, gutters,
louvers, and architectural sheet metal; field installation and safety;
duct installation; HVAC installation; ceiling installation. Technical
math: Fractions; decimals; use of algebraic formulas; geometry of
right triangles; calculator use. Welding processes: Oxyacetylene
welding; shielded metal arc welding; welding safety; welding power
sources; electrode codes; arc initiation; running beads; flat, vertical
down, vertical up, and overhead positions; carbon arc; flame cutting; GMAW
(gas metal arc welding) process; GTAW (gas tungsten arc welding) process.
Version 3: Drafting: Linework; lettering; geometric
constructions; orthographic projections; elevations; shop drawings; single
line drawings; job sketching (by computer); introduction to AutoCAD.
HVAC systems: Duct systems; central air conditioning equipment;
electromechanical devices; control systems; properties of air;
refrigeration cycle; heat load and cooling load calculations; testing and
balancing; servicing. Industrial safety: Shop safety
considerations; material handling; federal safety standards; Red Cross
CPR/First Aid training. Print reading: Architectural plans;
electrical plans; structural drawings; mechanical drawings; sheet metal
drawings; plan-elevation-sections. Sheet metal working and
installation: Shop equipment; materials; hand tools; soldering; shop
fabrication procedures; safe shop practices; power equipment; plasma arc
cutting using computer control; laying out patterns and fabrication of
ducts, elbows, transitions, offsets, gutters, louvers, and architectural
sheet metal; field installation and safety; duct installation; HVAC
installation; ceiling installation. Technical math: Fractions;
decimals; use of algebraic formulas; geometry of right triangles;
calculator use. Welding processes: Oxyacetylene welding; shielded
metal arc welding; welding safety; welding power sources; electrode codes;
arc initiation; running beads; flat, vertical down, vertical up, and
overhead positions; carbon arc; flame cutting; GMAW (gas metal arc
welding) process; GTAW (gas turngsten arc welding) process. Version 4:
Drafting: Linework; lettering; geometric constructions;
orthographic projections; elevations; shop drawings; single line drawings;
job sketching (by computer); introduction to AutoCAD. HVAC systems:
Duct systems; central air conditioning equipment; electromechanical
devices; control systems; properties of air; refrigeration cycle; heat
load and cooling load calculations; testing and balancing; servicing.
Industrial safety: Shop safety considerations; material handling;
federal safety standards; Red Cross CPR/First Aid training. Print
reading: Architectural plans; electrical plans; structural drawings;
mechanical drawings; sheet metal drawings; plan-elevation-sections.
Sheet metal working and installation: Shop equipment; materials; hand
tools; soldering; shop fabrication procedures; safe shop practices; power
equipment; plasma arc cutting using computer control; laying out patterns
and fabrication of ducts, elbows, transitions, offsets, gutters, louvers,
and architectural sheet metal; field installation and safety; duct
installation; HVAC installation; ceiling installation. Technical math:
Fractions; decimals; use of algebraic formulas; geometry of right
triangles; calculator use. Welding processes: Oxyacetylene welding;
shielded metal arc welding; welding safety; welding power sources;
electrode codes; arc initiation; running beads; flat, vertical down,
vertical up, and overhead positions; carbon arc; flame cutting; GMAW (gas
metal arc welding) process; GTAW (gas tungsten arc welding) process.
Credit recommendation: Version 1 or 2: In the associate
degree/certificate category, 23 semester hours, distributed as follows: 3
semester hours in Drafting, 3 semester hours in HVAC Systems, 1 semester
hour in Industrial Safety, 3 semester hours in Print Reading, 8 semester
hours in Sheet Metal Working and Installation, 3 semester hours in
Technical Math, 2 semester hours in Welding, or in the lower
division baccalaureate/associate degree category, 14 semester hours,
distributed as follows: 3 semester hours in Drafting, 1 semester hour in
Industrial Safety, 8 semester hours in Sheet Metal Working and
Installation, and 2 semester hours in Welding (12/93). Version 3:
In the associate degree/certificate category, 27 semester hours,
distributed as follows: 3 semester hours in Drafting, 6 semester hours in
HVAC Systems (3 lecture, 3 shop), 1 semester hour in Industrial Safety, 3
semester hours in Print Reading, 9 semester hours in Sheet Metal Working
and Installation (3 lecture, 6 shop), 3 semester hours in Technical Math,
2 semester hours in Welding, or in the lower division
baccalaureate/associate degree category, 21 semester hours, distributed as
follows: 3 semester hours in Drafting, 6 semester hours in HVAC Systems (3
lecture, 3 shop) 1 semester hour in Industrial Safety, 9 semester hours in
Sheet Metal Working and Installation (3 lecture, 6 shop), and 2 semester
hours in Welding (11/98 revalidation). Version 4: In the associate
degree/certificate category, 25 semester hours, distributed as follows: 3
semester hours in Drafting, 4 semester hours in HVAC, 1 semester hour in
Industrial Safety, 4 semester hours in Print Reading, 5 semester hours in
Sheet Metal Working and Installation (2 lecture, 3 shop), 2 semester hours
in Technical Math, 2 semester hours in Welding, 3 semester hours in CAD,
and 1 semester hour as general technical elective; or in the
lower division baccalaureate/associate degree category, 21 semester hours,
distributed as follows: 3 semester hours in Drafting, 4 semester hours in
HVAC Systems, 1 semester hour in Industrial Safety, 2 semester hours in
Print Reading, 5 semester hours in Sheet Metal Working and Installation (2
lecture, 3 shop), 2 semester hours in Welding, 3 semester hours in CAD,
and 1 semester hour as general technical elective (8/03 revalidation).
Updated
2/2/04
Return
to all CCR Online listings
|