Oil and Gas Service Unit Operator

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AVG. SALARY

$64,490

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EDUCATION

No standard requirement

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

What To Learn

High School

Suggested Steps to Prepare for a Oil and Gas Service Unit Operator Career (Grades 6-12)

Check out the recommended classes, activities and skills below for each grade level. These recommendations are very general -- discuss your specific course plan with your school counselors and teachers.

AI-assisted and curriculum-reviewed guidance. Talk with your counselor or teacher about your specific plan.
Grades 6-8

Helpful Classes

  • Math
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Design

Things to Try

  • Measure parts, follow a sequence, and check whether the finished item matches the design, Practice using diagrams, labels, and simple quality checks during a build task, Compare how materials, heat, speed, or machine settings can change a product, Interview an oil and gas service unit operator about precision, safety, and production steps

Focus Skills

  • Measurement
  • Precision
  • Procedure-following
  • Troubleshooting
  • Quality checking

Helpful Classes

  • Manufacturing Technology
  • Algebra I
  • Physical Science
  • Technical Drawing
  • Safety

Recommended Learning Areas

  • materials
  • measurement
  • shop safety
  • basic machines
  • teamwork

Things to Try

  • Join a shop, robotics, or manufacturing activity and practice step-by-step production work, Read a simple blueprint, work order, or process sheet and explain the key details, Observe how operators, assemblers, or inspectors keep parts organized and within tolerance, Shadow an oil and gas service unit operator or plant worker to see how quality and output are tracked

Focus Skills

  • Measurement
  • Precision
  • Procedure-following
  • Troubleshooting
  • Quality checking

Helpful Classes

  • Manufacturing Technology
  • Geometry
  • Blueprint Reading
  • Materials Processing
  • Computer Applications

Recommended Learning Areas

  • production steps
  • blueprint reading
  • machine basics
  • quality checks
  • documentation

Things to Try

  • Complete a build or fabrication project and document each setup, measurement, and adjustment, Practice using gauges, checklists, and work instructions to verify quality, Compare manual, automated, and robotic production steps and explain the differences, Write notes on defects, downtime, scrap, or process changes

Focus Skills

  • Measurement
  • Precision
  • Procedure-following
  • Troubleshooting
  • Quality checking

Helpful Classes

  • Precision Manufacturing
  • Technical Math
  • Blueprint Reading
  • Quality Control
  • Robotics

Recommended Learning Areas

  • tolerances
  • process control
  • robotics or automation
  • inspection
  • workflow improvement

Things to Try

  • Complete a manufacturing project tied to setup, machining, welding, assembly, inspection, or automation, Use blueprints, process sheets, or control plans to keep work accurate and consistent, Observe how workers track throughput, quality, maintenance, and safety in a production line, Interview professionals about tolerances, troubleshooting, and lean improvement

Focus Skills

  • Measurement
  • Precision
  • Procedure-following
  • Troubleshooting
  • Quality checking

Helpful Classes

  • Advanced Manufacturing
  • Technical Math
  • Blueprint Reading
  • Quality Assurance
  • Industrial Safety

Recommended Learning Areas

  • manufacturing systems
  • quality assurance
  • lean processes
  • preventive maintenance
  • production metrics

Things to Try

  • Build a portfolio with parts, measurements, process notes, quality checks, and production data, Complete a capstone tied to machining, fabrication, assembly, inspection, or automation, Compare pathways in welding, machining, quality, robotics, process operations, and plant support, Practice documenting defects, setup changes, and workflow improvements

Focus Skills

  • Measurement
  • Precision
  • Procedure-following
  • Troubleshooting
  • Quality checking

Beyond High School

Here's a list of programs that you should consider if you're interested in this career:

Education Level

Education training and experience are required at different levels for success in different occupations.

No standard requirement

Oil and gas service unit operators do not have formal educational requirements and will typically receive moderate-term on-the-job training.

Insider Info

Additional Information

Post-secondary training in mechanics, electrical work, electronics, power engineering, chemical engineering technology, petroleum engineering technology or mechanical engineering technology is preferred.

Grace McDougald is the manager of community relations for a pipeline company. She says her employer looks for people with a technical background. That could be an associate's degree from a two-year college in a technical discipline -- hydraulics, environmental engineering or mechanical engineering.

Her company also provides extensive in-house training to its employees.

"Oil pipeline operators need to have good common sense, be able to problem solve and they must be able to follow directions," she says.

Oil pipeline operator Lawanda Craft notes that people applying for jobs with her company are required to take an exam. It tests applicants' math skills as well as their mechanical abilities.

There are questions involving schematics, such as, "If Switch A is turned on, which light bulb will burn?"

"Girls often have trouble with this because they don't study those subjects in school," says Craft. "If you're interested in this career, be sure to take mathematics and mechanical courses."

Brad Ashcroft says that his company provides training to its own employees as well as to people with other companies.

A new employee will train both in the control room and outside. They learn using online procedures, as well as practicing with computer simulations of situations.

Most employees take six months to a year before they reach the place where they can work alone.

Oil pipeline operators must be detail-oriented, flexible and have good color vision. They must also be good at working with machinery and must have good people skills, since they work on a team.