User:Fixta3795/sandbox
Careers
[edit]Facilities engineering is a broad study of engineering. Join sentences into a compound sentence This makes it difficult to put facilities engineers into one category of jobs. According to a survey name specific survey source the most common career fields for facilities engineer are construction, project management, facility management, energy management, design, staff engineering and staff architecture[1]put references after the period. While the aerospace and green building sector are not majority of employment for facilities engineering.Previous clause is not a sentence. Use a comma to join with next sentence The two sectors have grown and recruited heavily for facilities engineer in recent years[2]. Another thing to consider is that most facilities engineers do not stay stationary in their careers. The careers of facilities engineer usually start off with operations, specialist"specialist" doesn't fit grammatically. "specialization" may be more appropriate, maintenancecomma and consulting[1]. Then after years of experience most facilities engineers purse pursuepositions as director of facilities, energy manger, facilities manager, facilities maintenance supervisor commaand facilities planner. (source?)
At this point, the rest of the article has many grammatical errors like those pointed out in the paragraph above. Please fix these.
Day to Day Operations
[edit]· Ensure a company’s operations are working properly
· Inspect operations, equipment and machinery
· Plan for maintenance and upgrade machinery
· Reduce or protect the company’s product from defects
2. Specialist Engineer
· Running diagnostics and test on specific machinery
· Determining the problems of the machinery by examining test
· Analyze the cost to repair or maintenance required to specific machinery
· Work on the specific machinery to fix or maintenance require
· Installation and maintenance of industrial equipment
· routine inspections and preventive maintenance of equipment
· troubleshooting issues on industrial equipment
· make on site repairs
· Understand and analyze an engineering system of different clients
· Find improvements or solutions in the engineering systems
· Calculate numbers to show clients savings, advantages and cost
· Plan the operations need to complete the project
· Sell the project to the client
Areas of Research
[edit]The research done by facilities engineer is involved in the energy sector. Facilities engineer try to find new ways in order to improve efficiency and save power for industrial equipment and buildings. This has pushed many innovations in the move to green buildings and energy storage. The green building movement has caused research into how to reduce energy waste in industrial buildings[5]. Some of the innovations involve smart lights, thermal curtains, cool roofs, green insulation and rainwater storage[5]. The goal of the green building is to make a building that is sustainable and has no negative impact on the environment[4]. The energy storage research focus on innovating new equipment to store energy in off-peak hours and use during peak hours. These new innovations technologies range from flywheel storage to hydrogen production during off-peak hours.
1. Website. Company is supported by advertisers, but the content being pulled is simply salary statistics for different specializations of engineering. There is therefore little potential for bias. The author states they are pulling the data from salary.com, which is ok in terms of reliability.
2. Website. Missing URL
3. Book
4. Government website
5. Journal article
- ^ a b "Top 5 Facilities Management Jobs & Salary Ranges". www.buildings.com. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- ^ "ENGINEER CAREERS: Lift-off for aerospace jobs". Proquest. 2006.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|url=
(help)CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Association for Facilities Engineering. (1999). Facilities operations & engineering reference. R.S. Means Co. ISBN 0-87629-462-X. OCLC 42332231.
- ^ a b "Facilities & Construction". www.gsa.gov. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- ^ a b Putnam, Cynthia; Price, Stan (2005-06). "High‐performance facilities engineering: Preparing the team for the sustainable workplace". Journal of Facilities Management. 3 (2): 161–172. doi:10.1108/14725960510808464. ISSN 1472-5967.
{{cite journal}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help)