Electronics
The field of electronics is expanding in many areas. At Hamilton Tech, you will learn the theory behind electronics and then apply that theory in the laboratory. Our facilities include the tools and equipment necessary to be a success in the exciting field of electronics.
Monday – Thursday School Week
Day classes 8:20 a.m. to 1:10 p.m.
Evening classes 5:50 p.m. to 10:40 p.m.
Hands-on training
Six semester Associate of Science Degree Program (less than 2 years to earn an Associates Degree)
Eight semester Bachelor of Science Degree Program
Industry standard Training Equipment
Courses Related to Employment Field
Curriculum Developed for Industry
Access to Career Services
Financial Aid Available to those who qualify
This program is designed for the entry-level student who has not yet had any experience with electronics. This program provides you with the fundamentals of most phases of electronics used in industry and prepares the individual to gain further on-the-job training under the supervision of more experienced technicians in a specific field of electronics.
Electronics Courses by Semester
Associate of Science Degree
- Preparation for Technical Studies
- Basic Electricity & Electronics
- Communications Electronics
- Computer Fundamentals
- Digital Electronics
- Industrial Electronics
Bachelor of Science Degree
- Preparation for Technical Studies
- Basic Electricity & Electronics
- Communications Electronics
- Computer Fundamentals
- Digital Electronics
- Industrial Electronics
- Human Relations & Communications
- Advanced Industrial Electronics
What kind of job might you get when you have successfully completed the Electronics program?
A graduate of the Electronics Program will have a variety of job possibilities open to him or her. Examples of career-related jobs include, but are not limited to:
- Electronics Systems Technician
- Robotics Technician
- Production Test Technician
- Bio-Medical Technician
- Computer Technician
- Communications Technician
- Calibration Technician
- Technical Sales Representative
- Electronics Troubleshooter
- Technical Associate
- Research Associate
- Electronics Systems Sales
Computer-Integrated Manufacturing (CIM)
Today, computers and industry go together. CIM allows you the opportunity to design with Solidworks software and apply that design using CNC and CAM machines. Be a part of this new and growing career field!
Monday – Thursday School Week
Evenining classes 5:50 p.m. to 10:40 p.m.
30 week Diploma Program
Modern Training Equipment
Courses Related to Employment Field
Curriculum Developed for Industry
Access to Career Services
Financial Aid Available to those who qualify
This program is designed for the entry-level student who has not yet had any experience with machining. The student will develop techniques in approaching and completing detailed, annotated drawings in the mechanical discipline. An intermediate understanding of application of CNC will be achieved through interactive projects throughout the program.
Course Content per Semester
CIM First Semester
- Sketching Parts
- Basic Geometry
- Basic Trigonometry
- Cartesian Coordinate System
- 2-D Drawing
- Measuring Devices
- Reverse Engineering Parts
- 3-D Drawing
CIM Second Semester
- Basic CNC Lathe Operation
- CNC Lathe G-codes
- CNC Lathe Programming from Blueprint
- CNC Lathe Programming from a Part
- Basic CNC Mill Operation
- CNC Mill G-codes
- CNC Mill Programming from a Blueprint
- CNC Mill Programming from a Part
- CAD-CAM CNC Lathe Programming
- CAD-CAM CNC Mill Programming
What kind of job might you get when you have successfully completed the CIM program?
A graduate of the Computer Integrated Manufacturing Program will have a variety of job possibilities open to him or her. Examples of career-related jobs include, but are not limited to:
- CNC technician
- CNC Operator/Programmer
- Automation Technician
- CAD/CAM Operator/Designer
- Engineering Technician
- Manufacturing Technician
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