Part of Communication (Levels 1 and 2)Engineering
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Interviewer: George, can you tell me what you鈥檙e looking for?
Speaker: Yes, I鈥檓 just looking through the user manual for the laser cutting machine.
I鈥檓 an engineering apprentice so I am trained on this equipment, however I鈥檇 just like to familiarise myself with the risks that are involved with using it.
On this contents page if I go to 'Operating Instructions'鈥 I know I鈥檓 on the right page because the heading details 'Safety'.
I know I鈥檓 talking about the right machine because the subheading includes 'Laser Safety Compartment'.
I can see straight away here I鈥檝e got bullet-pointed 'Dos' and 'Don鈥檛s'.
Now I鈥檓 looking for a risk assessment, which will be under the 'Safety' tab.
So here we can see a table.
This table has got boxes and columns.
The first column includes details of each hazard that we鈥檙e likely to come across whilst using the cutting machine.
The one I鈥檓 most interested in is the 'Risk Rating'.
I can see from this column that anything above a seven is quite a risk.
The first one I can see here is rated at nine, and that鈥檚 when we鈥檙e pushing the laser into position.
The next one that catches my eye is the fumes that the laser produces.
So yep, I feel confident with that now.
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Speaker 1: If you could give me a manual feed.
Three hundred and ten I think should be enough.
Speaker 2: Yep, yep that鈥檚 correct.
Speaker 1: OK, and then I can start the next one.
Interviewer: George, what are you doing?
Speaker 2: (TO AUDIENCE) Me and Sam are working on the laser cutting machine.
It鈥檚 cutting holes into a section of steel for our project.
Once it鈥檚 completed we鈥檒l check it, reference it to a drawing and then adjust it accordingly.
Speaker 2: (TO OTHER PEOPLE) I think we should go down and check multiple holes, yeah?
Speaker 1: OK.
Speaker 2: OK?
Speaker 1: Go for it. I鈥檒l document them.
If you mark down what we鈥檝e got, what number we鈥檙e on, and I鈥檒l write down the measurements for each hole.
Speaker 2: OK. So I鈥檓 getting this first one here Sam, at 4.8 millimetres.
Speaker 1: 4.8. OK.
Speaker 2: I鈥檓 just going to label that one with an asterisk sign. OK?
Speaker 1: So I think that鈥檚 a little bit low.
Speaker 2: That鈥檚 a little bit low.
Speaker 1: (TO AUDIENCE) We鈥檙e very good at helping each other.
That also enables us to check each other鈥檚 work as we鈥檙e going.
We can then exchange information and make sure we鈥檙e not making any mistakes as we go along.
Speaker 1: I鈥檓 typing up a document that describes what me and Sam have just done out on the cutting machine.
This is a formal document and we have to make sure that all the spelling and punctuation is correct.
Speaker 2: (TO OTHER PEOPLE) Alright George?
Speaker 1: Hi Sam. I鈥檝e just finished writing these notes.
Would you mind giving me a hand looking through some of the spelling?
Speaker 2: Yeah, let鈥檚 take a look mate.
Start with the sheet travelling over the first tool in alignment with pin 17.
I think 'alignment' is incorrect. It sounds right but looks wrong.
Speaker 1: Uh huh.
Speaker 2: There鈥檚 possibly a silent letter in there?
Speaker 1: Yep.
Speaker 2: I think it鈥檚 a 鈥榞鈥.
A-L-I-G-N. Give it a spellcheck to check?
So there鈥檚 an extra 鈥榚鈥 in there as well.
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2: So that鈥檚 correct.
Speaker 1: 'Reduction'. Erm.
Speaker 2: It sounds like a 鈥榮hun鈥, doesn't it?
But it doesn鈥檛 spell like that.
So I鈥檓 sure that you鈥檝e got to put a 鈥榯鈥 after the 鈥榗鈥.
Speaker 1: Yep. OK.
Speaker 2: 'Reduction', yep that reads well.
Speaker 1: OK, so this will be signed off by my supervisor before being used in production.
Find out more by working through a topic
Using complex sentences and responding to detailed questions
Reading reference materials and using relevant detail in writing
Looking for the main points in a text and writing in detail
Asking questions, using specialist words and writing using subheadings