Job Description – Machinery Control Engineering Specialist
Qualifications
- Bachelor Degree in Engineering or Science major in Engineering in the area of specialization.
Knowledge and/or Experience
- 8 years’ experience in the area of specialization within Oil and Gas industry.
- Expert level knowledge in machinery control systems and schemes such as GE, CCC, DCS and DLN tuning.
Part A: Job Specification
Job Purpose
- Advise and support machinery control systems implementation during EPC and Startup phase until handover to permanent Asset whilst ensuring project deliverables meet Operations expectations in term of Safety, Operability, Reliability and Maintainability over the facility design life cycle.
- Provide a variety of Machinery Control Engineering supports (in the areas of GE, CCC, DCS, DLN tuning, etc) to contribute to the division strategy and goals which includes design reviews, studies, commissioning, start-up, failure analysis and advanced troubleshooting as part of punch list and warranty claim resolutions, and Management of Change.
- Review, validate and support development of advanced machinery control schemes of machines and its drivers (Gas turbine, Steam turbine and variable frequency drives for motor) of new projects to achieve high standards of Reliability, Availability and Cyber Security.
- Review and develop testing procedures like surge tests, DLN tuning, Machine Test Runs and performance tuning for turbo machinery systems and DCS controls for machineries.
- Support Factory Acceptance Tests and review performance test results of machines. Validate machinery performance with theoretical calculation and compare to OEM performance maps and actual performance at site.
- Develop plans and work schedules to ensure effective completion of tasks and activities, meeting the section and division KPIs.
- Provide technical inputs related to area of expertise to other disciplines and functions as per requirements to support overall business objectives with the key focus being in the area of process and machine interactions.