Advice on most efficient path to become a CAD Technician

Advice on most efficient path to become a CAD Technician

paul.thomeKPLYW
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Message 1 of 9

Advice on most efficient path to become a CAD Technician

paul.thomeKPLYW
Participant
Participant
Hello, I'm new here so bare with me. I have begun learning AutoCAD. A family member is an employee at a firm and they are in need of lower level employees. I have asked if there was a job title he could give me if I get the position and I was told CAD Technician. So far I have completed two of the 'Essential' AutoCAD courses on LinkedIn Learning and have begun work on a Drafting course. Any advice is appreciated. My goal is to learn as much as possible while making the most use of time time as it's limited due to my full-time job.
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1,025 Views
8 Replies
Replies (8)
Message 2 of 9

Patchy
Mentor
Mentor
Accepted solution

Your family member is your best help. He/she know exactly the tasks to teach you.

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Message 3 of 9

tboehler
Collaborator
Collaborator
Accepted solution

See if your family member can get you a copy of the firms CAD Standards.  That will give you a great idea of what to become familiar with.  Also know the discipline you will be in (Civil, Architecture, etc.) and other Software(s) you might need to learn.

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Message 4 of 9

paul.thomeKPLYW
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Participant
Accepted solution
Ok great thank you. I'll pass this along!
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Message 5 of 9

Anonymous
Not applicable

Great advice, and see if you can get a copy of an old set of plans the company does. Review it thoroughly.

What is being shown on each sheet?

How and what do they annotate on each sheet? Highlight all the annotations and see if you can make a list of what is on each sheet.

Are hidden lines shown on all views or just some? Can you figure out why?

Background images? No images?

Are isometric views used? When?

Good luck, it's a fun job!

Nancy

 

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Message 6 of 9

paul.thomeKPLYW
Participant
Participant
Thanks for the input, all of it is helpful!
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Message 7 of 9

pszty0001
Observer
Observer

It's not just "know the discipline you will be in" he or she will have to have a degree with a major in that discipline, for the most part. Either that or "industry experience" and trust me getting into college and getting a degree in it is by far the easier road. You can get into and graduate from most colleges and universities without people having to LIKE you, REFER you or RECOMMEND you, for God's sake. 

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Message 8 of 9

tboehler
Collaborator
Collaborator

Chill!  The OP is talking about an entry level position.  Do you need a hug today?

Message 9 of 9

CodeDing
Advisor
Advisor

@pszty0001 ,

 

Did you just spend a day reviving 4+ year-old posts to critique people asking about entry level positions?
Perhaps contributing something productive, like constructive feedback, to more current posts might serve the forums better.

 

This would provide the following:

- A higher chance of OP actually replying

- Up-to-date feedback from active users

- Addressing topics that are needing help now (vs many years ago)

 

Best,

~DD