Comment by Animats
14 hours ago
Here's a typical job in that category. Boring but practical Chicago Dryer.[1]
Industrial Controls Engineer
Chicago Dryer
Chicago, IL
$80,000 to $110,000 Yearly
Vision, Medical, Dental, Paid Time Off, Life Insurance, Retirement
Full-Time
5+ years of experience in controls & software engineering
High-level knowledge of one or more programming languages (C, Pascal(structured-text))
Familiarity with Windows, Linux & Realtime operating systems
Familiarity with electrical codes for industrial machinery
Electrical design & CAD experience for automation-controls
Solid knowledge of classical-physics (mechanics & motion)
Mechanical aptitude and ability to work with hand tools
Strong troubleshooting and problem-solving skills
Ability to work well with personnel at all levels
Beckhoff TwinCat3 experience is a plus
Jira and GIT experience is a plus
Electronics design & trouble-shooting is a plus
Leader in the heavy machinery that takes clean linen items after washing and dries, sorts, folds, and stacks them by the ton. There are vision systems and robotic grippers involved. They've been in business for over a century, building heavy duty laundry equipment. It's a very steady business. Probably good job security. The startups making all the noise in clothes folding, such as Foldimate and Laundroid, went bust. Chicago Dryer equipment processed a few tons of laundry while you were reading this.
That's what a blue-collar programming job looks like. But it will be a very clean blue collar.
[1] https://www.ziprecruiter.com/c/Chicago-Dryer/Job/Industrial-...
How strict is something like that on the demands for CAD and Electrical Design stuff? Because I've never done any of that. I'd be happy to learn it, but that doesn't seem to matter anymore.
Wisdom in the past was, if you have half of it, apply, because it's always a wish list. I don't know if that still applies, though,