Page 14 - Spring 2022 Catalog
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 STATIONARY ENGINEER AND BOILER OPERATORS
Robert “Butch” Perry
The work of stationary engineers is varied and complex. They are responsible for the operation, maintenance, renovation and repair of boiler systems and all other mechanical systems in a facility. Stationary engineers are employed in schools, hospitals, hotels, apartment buildings, shopping malls, airports, power plants, industrial and manufacturing plants, breweries, co-generation plants, petro-chemical plants, office and commercial buildings, government facilities and other workplaces. In operating and repairing these facilities, stationary engineers perform work
on boilers and steam systems; heating, ventilating and air conditioning systems; building automation systems; diesel engines, turbines, generators; pumps, piping and compressed gas systems; refrigeration and electrical systems and numerous other physical plant functions. We are called stationary engineers because the equipment we operate is similar to equipment operated by locomotive or marine engineers except it is not in a vehicle that moves.
https://www.gapowerengineer.com/index.htm
  INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGY
 STEAM THEORY
( Boiler, Pumps and Engines)
If you are interested in entering the field of Stationary Engineering or just want to upgrade your license to a higher level, this course is designed to help you do just that.
Course covers: boilers, steam tables, steam and water cycle, combustion process, basic properties of fuels, fuel oil systems, feed water regulators, safety valves, AC & DC theory, series and parallel circuits and much more.
223CCER514A | 10 sessions | $1499
Friday | 01/14-03/18 | 8am-4:30pm Location: CSU Main Campus
ELECTRICAL THEORY
(Motors, Transformers, and Generators)
Course covers: boilers, steam tables, steam and water cycle, combustion process, basic properties of fuels, fuel oil systems, feed water regulators, safety valves, AC & DC theory, series and parallel circuits and much more.
224CIND500A | 10 sessions | $1499
Friday | 05/06-07/08 | 8am-4:20pm Location: CSU Main Campus
  HVAC-R (High and Low Pressure Chiller, Industrial Refrigeration)
This course is tailored to help you learn the basic refrigeration cycle, heat transfer and conditioning the air, basic electricity, ohm’s law problems, series circuits, parallel circuits, DC and AC theory. Field trips may be interspersed and used to augment classroom instruction. Textbooks required.
Topics covered include:
Introduction to temperature and heat
• Specific gravity, specific volume, and gas laws;
• Introduction to refrigeration, basic compression cycle, boiling and condensing points for different refrigerants, color codes, and enthalpy chart;
• Evaporators: dry-type evaporators, flooded evaporators, air and water cooled evaporative condensers; Compressors: reciprocating, open drive, semi hermetic and hermetic;
• Principles of: superheat load, defrost methods, head pressure control, sub cooling, expansion; and General safety practices.
231JIND520 | 10 Sessions | $1499
Friday | 9/9 – 11/11 | 9am-4:30pm Location: CSU Main Campus
12 | www.clayton.edu/ce | 678 466-5118 | email: ce@clayton.edu
  






































































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