I wish I could change my screen name to "Ex-nukeet1"
Background: In the Navy 10 years as Reactor Operator.
I got out a few years back and ended up applying for several jobs
AO/EO/NLO (depending on the company)
Instrumentations and Controls (I+C)
Electrical maintenance supervisor
Instant SRO.
I was offered jobs at each. I chose Instant SRO at a BWR.
Here is what I know:
1. The 6 months on site prior to the program is what you make of it. You can sit there and dink around on the internet, staple broadzillas turnover sheets or whatever else you want to waste time with
OR
You can do tours with the NLOs, take the rounds, study the lesson plans, talk with the CROs, talk with the SROs, help out when barrels need to be moved, hump some hoses around, help out with evolutions, and build a good hard working reputation. It takes a long time to get a good hard working reputation but it will pay off in the end.
My introduction to the bargaining unit persons was in the break room,
the person showing me and another instant around said
"Everyone I would like you to meet XXXXX"
the response from one of the old scruffy looking guy "Great, more F***ing useless people"
I still laugh about this today and mess around with this RO, hard worker, great guy, but he made his point the first day... its an uphill battle (that can be won)
It is by far the hardest program/endeavour you will undertake. I literally studied 3-4 hours a night and worked weekends studying, making cards, walking down systems, learning setpoints, alarm responses, procedures, tech specs, permits, etc. etc. for 2 years. Picture power school, prototype, at sea experience and multiply it by 50. Your Navy experience gets you in the door and that is about it.
No one cares where you got your 4 year degree from, RPI, Thomas Edison, Harvard, it really does not matter, What they do care about is do you have the ability to make conservative decisions, are you going to panic when alarms come in, and are you focus on overall plant response and not focus on the shiny object right in front of you? (ooooooh shineyyyyy)
2. BWR V. PWR. The rods go in the wrong way and we boil in the core. There is no such thing as SUR. Once you learn to accept it.... life becomes easy.
How to instantly become one of the failing statistics you hear about:
1. Think you "deserve" anything.
2. Believe training is going to teach you everything you need to know.
"You need to know everything about everything" anonymous instructor, when asked what a licensed operator needed to know for an exam.
Know the systems, draw them, design basis, accident analysis, alarms, setpoints, system interaction, etc etc etc.
3. Believe you are better then the operators who work for you. (backwards thinking) The operators who have worked there for many years know the plant, if they have a concern, you better have a concern because more times then not, they are right. (almost like when an RO told and EOOW, Sir, I really do not think you want to do that.... oh nooooo..... Captain to EOOW, why did you do that?, ummmmmm, Captain to RO, why didn't you say anything.. I did sir.... Captain to EOOW, you are a dumbass, Captain walks out)
I hope this gives you some insight on Instant SRO challenges. I have had my SRO license for 3 years.