Please tell me about it...is it stressful, physical, mentally challenging? Thanks
Yep.
Quote from: weatherby460 on Sep 23, 2011, 04:57
Please tell me about it...is it stressful, physical, mentally challenging? Thanks
Just give up and surrender.
no offense...but you people have alot of inside jokes i notice
My reply wasn't a joke. It was the shortest truthful answer possible.
Being a nuclear operator is all of the things you said.
NLO isn't so much stress as it is physical. Walking for hours, bending, lifting, carrying, operating equipment, etc.
RO/SRO isn't so much physical as it is stressful. You're given volumes upon volumes of information and you have to know all of it. You have to know each of a million alarms and be able to decipher which is most important. Besides the nuclear part, you have the volumes upon volumes of federal, state and local regulations you have to know. You have to be able to get your work done on schedule while operating the plant safely..., not always the easiest thing to do. Someone is always looking at your work, scrutinizing it and Monday morning quarterbacking it..., you're always in jeopardy of losing your license, being fired, or being fined for your mistakes. There are shifts that at the end of, I felt like someone took my brain and threw it in the microwave. So yeah, its stressful and mentally challenging at times. It is also greatly rewarding as well.
So those are the basis statements behind my "yep."
Justin
PS Operators also need to have a thick skin. Just sayin.
Quote from: weatherby460 on Sep 24, 2011, 07:50
no offense...but you people have alot of inside jokes i notice
You sure you are not related to this poster (re: Hitec757) (http://www.nukeworker.com/forum/index.php/topic,32932.0.html)?
Basically i am trying to learn about this as much as I can.
Try the search function.
How about YOU pick any thread in the "getting in", "testing & training" or "nuclear operator" forums & read them. Stop pan handling (re: asking FAQ) & acting like WE owe you something. WE don't.
i did a search for physical requirements and found nothing
First, I will agree the search functions (all three) have been acting funny. BUT, my suggestion was to start reading the various threads in certain forums. I did not suggest you search only (or at all). Second, I have researched your posts & you are not even looking at the threads already posted or searching for info. So, do not try to blow sunshine our direction that you are doing so. I can tell you that I know of not one operator with a pace-maker.
NLO can be a very physically stressful job (at times). Spending hours turning large valves in 100+ degree environments while wearing full protective clothing.