JedClampett
Structural
- Aug 13, 2002
- 4,031
We (me and my group) have been busting tail on designs for the last year. A lot of our work is going into construction simultaneously. So I'm proposing we hire a person just to check shop drawings. This is for several reasons, like lowering our costs (having a cheaper specialist rather than an more expensive engineer who views shop drawing review as punishment) and helping morale. I figure that the pay would be somewhere around a senior CAD operator ($35 to $40 an hour) I see this submittal crunch as lasting for the near (a couple years) future.
In my past life, we had Eastern European guys (I'm not sure if they were degreed or not), who must of come into the USA after the war, do this work. They were called shop drawing checkers. They were technically very savvy and could review rolls of shop drawings day after day after day. Some even specialized in reinforcing, others structural steel. These guys are gone, dead or retired or both.
So how could I could hire someone to just do shop drawings? I don't see a new graduate as a possibility. Once they get familiar, they're going to want to move out of this job and do designs. I don't really blame them. And to keep them, even if they don't get burned out, they're going to want regular raises to keep up with their buddies which reduces my economic advantage.
Would a detailer be a good fit? Someone who doesn't want the pressure of doing designs, just checking others work? How do I write an ad for this job?
In my past life, we had Eastern European guys (I'm not sure if they were degreed or not), who must of come into the USA after the war, do this work. They were called shop drawing checkers. They were technically very savvy and could review rolls of shop drawings day after day after day. Some even specialized in reinforcing, others structural steel. These guys are gone, dead or retired or both.
So how could I could hire someone to just do shop drawings? I don't see a new graduate as a possibility. Once they get familiar, they're going to want to move out of this job and do designs. I don't really blame them. And to keep them, even if they don't get burned out, they're going to want regular raises to keep up with their buddies which reduces my economic advantage.
Would a detailer be a good fit? Someone who doesn't want the pressure of doing designs, just checking others work? How do I write an ad for this job?