Where have I said they are untrainable? There's a learning curve from college to industry. depending on the degree, some steeper than others.I find you rather funny. Find anyone off the street that can run a CNC with no training. Liberal arts majors can be trained just like HS drop outs but liberal arts majors will probably be easier to train because they have shown they can stick to something. Just about any CNC router is a 3 axis machine. I guess you aren't very familiar with CNCs.
Ain't no HS dropout who has a clue how to set up or program (much less grind the cutting tooling) a lathe or mill. Hell, most HS dropouts probably never even heard of the simplest of 2 axis machines.
Ain't no HS graduate who has a clue how to set up or program (much less grind the cutting tooling) a lathe or mill. Hell, most HS graduates probably never even heard of the simplest of 2 axis machines.
Ain't no tech school drop out who has a clue how to set up or program (much less grind the cutting tooling) a lathe or mill. Hell, most tech school drop outs probably never even heard of the simplest of 2 axis machines.
Ain't no college drop out who has a clue how to set up or program (much less grind the cutting tooling) a lathe or mill. Hell, most college drop outs probably never even heard of the simplest of 2 axis machines.
Ain't no college graduate who has a clue how to set up or program (much less grind the cutting tooling) a lathe or mill. Hell, most college graduates probably never even heard of the simplest of 2 axis machines.
Frankly you are an idiot, RB. No one can run a CNC without either reading the fucking manual or having some training. You seem to think that people with liberal arts degrees are untrainable. You are free to have that opinion but it doesn't really make sense considering the hundreds of people with liberal arts degrees that are much better machinists than you are or will ever be.
Those liberal arts machinists you are fantasizing? I'm game