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Nuclear welding inspection technician

Nuclear welding inspection technician

Engineering and manufacturing

Level 4 - Higher Technical Occupation

Carrying out quality control and welding inspections for the nuclear industry, to ensure the safety and robustness of nuclear sites.

Reference: OCC0292

Status: assignment_turned_inApproved occupation

Average (median) salary: £29,630 per year

SOC 2020 code: 3115 Quality assurance technicians

SOC 2020 sub unit groups:

  • 3115/00 Quality assurance technicians
  • 3113/99 Engineering technicians n.e.c.
  • 3581/08 Nuclear safety inspectors
  • 8133/99 Energy plant operatives n.e.c.
  • 8143/00 Routine inspectors and testers

Technical Education Products

ST0292:

Nuclear welding inspection technician

(Level 4)

Approved for delivery

Employers involved in creating the standard:

Sellafield Ltd, Magnox Ltd, Research Sites Restoration Ltd, Low Level Waste Repository Ltd, Westinghouse Springfields Fuels Ltd, Amec Foster Wheeler, National Nuclear Laboratory, Cavendish Nuclear Ltd, West Cumberland Engineering Ltd, Morgan Sindall, Nuvia Ltd, EDF Energy, Costain Limited, National Skills Academy for Nuclear, Cogent Sector Skills Council, The Nuclear Institute, British Institute of Non Destructive Testing, The Welding Institute, Radwise Ltd, Doosan Babcock Ltd, Hargreaves Ductwork Ltd, Jacobs, Tata Steel Projects, Bureau Veritas UK

Summary

A Nuclear Welding Inspection Technician (NWIT) performs a quality control and welding inspection role for the nuclear industry. They ensure the safety and integrity of nuclear related fabrications to meet the exacting quality requirements specified in nuclear industry regulations, specifications, standards and detailed engineering documents. These are unique to the sector, hence the knowledge, skills and behaviours required to deploy this role are specific for the nuclear industry. They operate in a challenging environment where quality standards are paramount and safety is the overriding priority. This work will involve carrying out detailed observations, making detailed records, giving technical feedback and providing challenge throughout the manufacturing process. They perform inspection work on nuclear licensed sites (waste management, decommissioning, construction and operational nuclear plants) or in manufacturing facilities which supply the nuclear industry. The working conditions are varied and may involve wearing specialist safety equipment, shift working and working on sites and facilities running 365 day operations. They are expected to work individually and as part of an inspection team. They need to be able to work with minimum supervision, in a professional manner, taking responsibility for the quality and accuracy of the work they undertake.

Employers involved in creating the standard:

Sellafield Ltd, Magnox Ltd, Research Sites Restoration Ltd, Low Level Waste Repository Ltd, Westinghouse Springfields Fuels Ltd, Amec Foster Wheeler, National Nuclear Laboratory, Cavendish Nuclear Ltd, West Cumberland Engineering Ltd, Morgan Sindall, Nuvia Ltd, EDF Energy, Costain Limited, National Skills Academy for Nuclear, Cogent Sector Skills Council, The Nuclear Institute, British Institute of Non Destructive Testing, The Welding Institute, Radwise Ltd, Doosan Babcock Ltd, Hargreaves Ductwork Ltd, Jacobs, Tata Steel Projects, Bureau Veritas UK

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Keywords:

Eddy Current Testing
Magnetic Testing
Nuclear Industry
Nwit
Penetrant Testing
Radiographic Testing
Ultrasonic Testing
Visual Testing
Welding

Knowledge, skills and behaviours (KSBs)

K1: Material Science – They understand materials, specifically metallic, and their behaviour during welding. They have a thorough appreciation of metal types, properties, composition and failure mechanisms to support the selection process for nuclear applications. This will include weldability of material, consumable selection, joining dissimilar materials, heat treatment as well as the potential metallurgical issues. They will also understand the fundamental aspects of destructive testing.
K2: Welding Technology – They will be fully aware of the Quality Assurance requirements for welded constructions and have a clear understanding of the welding processes including accepted terminology, standards and abbreviations, i.e. tools & equipment, process and parameters, weld procedure & welder approval process and subsequent documentation & records.
K3: Welding Inspection – They will fully understand all of the nuclear industry quality control requirements during welding and have the ability to undertake all three stages of weld inspection, i.e. before/during and after welding resulting in categorising of weld defect. This will also include the requirements for inspection reporting and verification of certification data in accordance with relevant standards.
K4: NDT Techniques – They will have a knowledge of Non Destructive Testing (NDT) techniques, specifically Liquid Penetrant (LPI), Magnetic Particle (MPI), Radiographic (RT) & Ultrasonic (UT) Testing which are utilised to detect surface breaking and internal flaws. Understand why and when these techniques are deployed as well as the advantages and limitations of their use.
K5: Safety – They will understand the importance of safe working practices at a nuclear facility as well as the relationship between nuclear safety and quality, i.e. structured inspection mitigates the risk of a latent nuclear safety event. Be fully aware of the fundamental principles and implications of radiation types, sources, hazards and appropriate control measures. Understand how Human Performance and Human Factors affect the nuclear safety culture.

S1: Before Welding: They ensure material storage, condition and certification is correct and that the welding process is in accordance with an approved procedure. They also ensure that the welder is qualified, welding equipment is in a suitable condition and calibrated, consumables are correctly specified, stored and certified and weld joint fit up and weld faces are correct and free from damage and contaminants.
S2: During Welding: They carry out process and parameter monitoring and verification ensuring current, voltage, heat and travel speed are in accordance with the welding procedure. Inspection of the weld root and verification of inter run cleaning.
S3: After Welding: They carry out weld appearance & identification checks (visual inspection), Non-destructive testing, dimensional surveys against engineering drawings. They ensure subsequent repairs are completed and recorded, post weld heat treatment is in accordance with defined parameters and record completion & verification and subsequent inspection reporting.
S4: Technical Requirement – They can interpret engineering drawings and procedures to ensure fabrication and dimensional requirements are achieved. Correctly apply inspection methods and records results.
S5: Technical Specifications – They can apply relevant nuclear specific, British and international standards & specifications to inspection and reporting of welding and weld quality.
S6: Certification – They carry out verification of Certification data, ensuring the requirements of nuclear specific, British and international regulations, standards & specifications are achieved and traceability has been maintained throughout the welding and inspection phase.
S7: Safety – They always operate with the highest regard to safety of self and others within a nuclear environment and with effective control of risks associated with welding and inspection tasks.
S8: Business Improvement – They will apply a variety of appropriate business improvement techniques to solve business problems and improve business efficiency. Understand the theory, principles and practice associated with a variety of appropriate business improvement techniques.

B1: Commitment to Safety – They always demonstrate a strong commitment to personal safety behaviours as set out in the nuclear industry requirements. They actively challenge unsafe practices. They understand the relationship between nuclear safety and quality and ensure this is enforced within the supply chain.
B2: Integrity – They ensure openness in relations with customers, suppliers and other parties. They promote and model the highest standards of professional conduct, ethics and integrity.
B3: Resilience – They work well under pressure, continuously strive for excellence in all they do and challenge poor performance or non-conformance in a tactful, diplomatic manner. They will drive improvement opportunities as a result of identifying the cause of and applying appropriate technical principles to complex and non-routine engineering problems.
B4: Quality Focus – They follows rules, procedures and principles to ensure work completed is fit for purpose and pay attention to detail and carry out error checks throughout activities.
B5: Effective and Appropriate Communication – They will use oral, written and electronic methods; working effectively with others, with regards for diversity and equality.
B6: Personal Conduct – They work reliably and effectively without close supervision, accepting responsibility for their own work or that of others and are able to accept, allocate and supervise technical and other tasks.

Occupational Progression

This occupational progression map shows technical occupations that have transferable knowledge and skills.

In this map, the focused occupation is highlighted in yellow. The arrows indicate where transferable knowledge and skills exist between two occupations. This map shows some of the strongest progression links between the focused occupation and other occupations.

It is anticipated that individuals would be required to undertake further learning or training to progress to and from occupations. To find out more about an occupation featured in the progression map, including the learning options available, click the occupation.

Progression decisions have been reached by comparing the knowledge and skills statements between occupational standards, combined with individualised learner movement data.

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Engineering and manufacturing