How do they match: Control and Valve Installers and Repairers, Except Mechanical Door

  • Automation Controls Technician
  • Certification Technician
  • Control Valve Technician
  • Controls Technician
  • E/M Technician
  • Electric Meter Technician
  • Electrical Technician
  • Electrical Controls Technician
  • Electro-Mechanical Technician
  • Gas Technician
  • Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning Control Technician
  • I and E Technician
  • ICE Technician
  • Industrial Control Technician
  • Industrial Controls Technician
  • Instrument Technician
  • Instrument Control and Electrical Technician
  • Instrument and Controls Technician
  • Instrument and Electrical Technician
  • Instrumentation Technician
  • Maintenance Technician
  • Maintenance Controls Technician
  • Measurement Technician
  • Meter Technician
  • Motor Power Connector
  • Pneumatic Tool Repairer
  • Residential Gas Heat Technician
  • Safety Relief Valve Technician
  • Service Technician
  • Valve Technician

  • Cut seats to receive new orifices, tap inspection ports, and perform other repairs to salvage usable materials, using hand tools and machine tools.
  • Disassemble and repair mechanical control devices or valves, such as regulators, thermostats, or hydrants, using power tools, hand tools, and cutting torches.
  • Disconnect or remove defective or unauthorized meters, using hand tools.
  • Dismantle meters, and replace or adjust defective parts such as cases, shafts, gears, disks, and recording mechanisms, using soldering irons and hand tools.
  • Install, inspect and test electric meters, relays, and power sources to detect causes of malfunctions and inaccuracies, using hand tools and testing equipment.
  • Mount and install meters and other electric equipment such as time clocks, transformers, and circuit breakers, using electricians' hand tools.
  • Reassemble repaired equipment, and solder top, front, and back case panels in place, using soldering guns, power tools, and hand tools.
  • Repair electric meters and components, such as transformers and relays, and replace metering devices, dial glasses, and faulty or incorrect wiring, using hand tools.
  • Replace defective parts, such as bellows, range springs, and toggle switches, and reassemble units according to blueprints, using cam presses and hand tools.
  • Splice and connect cables from meters or current transformers to pull boxes or switchboards, using hand tools.

  • Clean equipment, parts, or tools to repair or maintain them in good working order.
  • Control power supply connections.