Electrical Field Service Technician
hace 15 horas
Houston
Job DescriptionDescription: The Electrical Field Service Technician installs, troubleshoots, tests, maintains, and documents electrical systems tied to generators, switchgear, transformers, control panels, auxiliary power units, and temporary or permanent site power equipment. This role is field-based and supports shop preparation, customer-site execution, commissioning support, rig up, rig down, and service work. Power Generation Field Service • Support diesel, natural gas, and packaged generator systems in the field., • Assist with generator startup, commissioning, function checks, inspections, corrective work, and service readiness checks., • Inspect batteries, chargers, alternator wiring, controllers, heaters, E-stops, alarms, shutdown circuits, and customer interface wiring., • Support ATS, switchgear, transformer, panelboard, and temporary power system work based on training and authorization., • Help set up and support load bank testing, including cable routing, connection checks, monitoring, and test documentation. Site Rig Up and Rig Down • Mobilize and demobilize generators, auxiliary power units, cable, grounding equipment, distribution gear, panels, skids, tooling, and consumables., • Install temporary and semi-permanent electrical systems using conduit, flexible conduit, cord sets, cable tray, junction boxes, panelboards, disconnects, and control wiring., • Lay out cable routes, protect cables from damage, maintain walking paths, and keep equipment access clear., • Install grounding and bonding conductors, ground rods, jumpers, clamps, and terminations under IES procedures and site requirements., • Verify equipment is staged, secured, labeled, documented, and ready for safe operation before turnover. Electrical Installation, Testing, and Troubleshooting • Pull, route, dress, label, terminate, and test low-voltage power wiring, control wiring, instrumentation wiring, and communication cabling., • Perform continuity checks, insulation resistance checks, polarity checks, torque checks, phase rotation checks, and point-to-point verification., • Read electrical drawings, wiring diagrams, schematics, one-lines, panel layouts, terminal schedules, and manufacturer manuals., • Troubleshoot start circuits, E-stop circuits, relays, fuses, breakers, sensors, wiring harnesses, battery systems, chargers, alarms, shutdowns, and communication faults., • Document findings with photos, measurements, test results, correction steps, redlines, and open punch items. Safety, Quality, and Customer Communication • Complete JSA, LOTO, pre-task planning, permits, and customer safety paperwork before work begins and when conditions change., • Follow IES and customer safety rules for electrical work, PPE, driving, fall protection, rigging, hot work, stop work, and incident reporting., • Maintain a clean work area, protect customer property, return unused materials, and control waste, scrap cable, fluids, and packaging., • Communicate job status, delays, risks, and material needs to the supervisor before they become schedule problems., • Represent IES professionally with customers, vendors, inspectors, OEM technicians, and other contractors. Work Schedule and Travel Expectations • Field schedule depends on customer workload, project schedule, and crew assignment. Work may include 10-hour, 12-hour, 14-hour, or 16-hour days where legal and approved., • Technicians may support short-term rig up and rig down projects, long-term customer support rotations, shop preparation, commissioning, emergency response, and planned maintenance windows., • Frequent travel, overnight stays, overtime, nights, weekends, holidays, and emergency callouts may be required., • Reliable attendance matters. Field crews depend on each technician arriving fit for duty, prepared, and ready with required PPE, tools, and documentation. Physical and Work Environment Requirements • Lift and carry up to 50 lb. regularly and heavier items with mechanical help or team lift., • Stand, walk, bend, kneel, climb, crawl, reach, grip tools, work from ladders or lifts, and access generator enclosures, skids, trailers, containers, and equipment rooms., • Work outdoors in heat, cold, rain, wind, mud, dust, high noise, poor lighting, and congested industrial sites., • Wear PPE for extended periods, including FR clothing, hard hat, safety glasses, hearing protection, gloves, fall protection, respirator when required, and arc-rated PPE when assigned. Education High school diploma or GED required. Trade school, electrical technology, industrial maintenance, diesel technology, military electrical or mechanical training, or apprenticeship experience preferred. Experience Minimum 2 years of hands-on electrical, generator, industrial maintenance, controls, field service, oilfield electrical, or power generation experience preferred. Candidates with strong trade school or military electrical training may be considered. Electrical Knowledge Working knowledge of AC and DC circuits, three-phase power, control wiring, relays, fuses, breakers, sensors, batteries, chargers, and basic generator controls. Drawings Ability to read wiring diagrams, schematics, one-lines, panel layouts, terminal schedules, and manufacturer manuals. Testing Able to use a digital multimeter, clamp meter, insulation resistance tester, battery tester, phase rotation meter, and approved test leads safely. Driving Valid driver license with acceptable driving record. Must be able to operate company vehicles and meet customer site access requirements. Work Authorization Must be eligible to work in the United States and pass applicable background checks, drug testing, and customer onboarding requirements. Preferred Qualifications • Texas Journeyman Electrician License, Apprentice Electrician License, or documented industrial electrical apprenticeship experience., • Generator controller experience with Deep Sea Electronics, ComAp, Basler, Woodward, CAT, Cummins, Kohler, Generac, MTU, or similar systems., • Experience with PLCs, HMIs, VFDs, instrumentation, 4 to 20 mA loops, Ethernet or Modbus communication, and controls troubleshooting., • Experience with oil and gas locations, frac fleet support, data center power systems, temporary power, generator yards, switchgear, and industrial construction., • Forklift, aerial lift, rigging, signal person, H2S, First Aid/CPR, OSHA 10, NFPA 70E, LOTO, load bank testing, or OEM generator training. Skills Electrical Troubleshooting Someone who can isolate faults using drawings, meters, test data, and a structured troubleshooting process. Drawing Interpretation Someone who can work from one-lines, schematics, point-to-point wiring, terminal schedules, panel layouts, and manuals. Field Installation Someone who can route, support, label, terminate, test, and protect field wiring in industrial environments. Generator Systems Someone who understands basic generator operation, start circuits, shutdown circuits, batteries, chargers, sensors, heaters, grounding, ATS interaction, and load testing support. Safety Discipline Someone who uses JSA, LOTO, PPE, barricades, meter checks, stop work authority, housekeeping, and pre-task communication without being reminded. Documentation Someone who can complete field tickets, timesheets, checklists, test records, photos, redlines, material requests, and customer notes clearly. Customer Conduct Someone who communicates clearly, does not guess, stays inside scope limits, and protects the IES reputation in the field.