Oil and Gas Technical Apprentice Programme & Training Course

Education:


Oil and Gas Technical Apprentice Programme

The Oil and Gas Technical Apprentice Programme (formerly the UK Upstream Oil and Gas Industry Technician Training Scheme) is recognised as one of the most successful apprenticeship schemes of its kind. 
Established in 1999, the scheme continues to grow in stature and offers a reputable learning experience, whilst providing the oil and gas industry with suitably skilled, trained and motivational technicians. 
The Oil and Gas Technical Apprentice Programme (OGTAP) is managed by OPITO, the skills organisation for oil and gas, and the Engineering Construction Industry Training Board (ECITB).  OPITO manage the programme on behalf of the operators and the ECITB manage the programme on behalf of the contractors.
The apprenticeship programme is comprised of two stages: 
  1. Trainees will attend an industry appointed college for 21 months where they will gain various qualifications
  2. On-the-job training with a sponsoring UK based energy company will take place for two years, where trainees will be mentored alongside experienced staff, gaining industry specific skills as well as an SVQ Level 3 in their chosen discipline.
To find out more visit www.ogtap.co.uk 
OGTAP Apprenticeship Vacancies

Being an apprentice gives you the opportunity to gain recognised qualifications, combined with practical training with some of the most innovative oil and gas companies in the world. 

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Education

What Is Vernier Caliper ? Principle Of Working Of The Vernier Scale




The Vernier caliper is an extremely precise measuring instrument; it is used to measure internal and external distances extremely accurately –  the error may be  as little as  0.05 mm – depending on the make.The VERNIER is a small movable graduated scale for obtaining fractional parts of subdivisions on a fixed main scale of any measuring instrument. With a normal scale we may be able to measure down to 0.50 mm or so, while with a vernier scale the least count may be 0.10 mm. Usually vernier calipers have both imperial (inches) and metric (mm) scales.



A vernier caliper is a precision measuring tool. It can be used for three types of measurements, outside distance (such as the length of an object) , inside distance such as the width of a groove or the diameter of a large hole, and depth, such as the depth of a hole or the height of a step.
Vernier calipers come in many sizes. A common type measures 0 to 6 inches.

Modern calipers are digital – in the sense it has an LCD display on which the reading appears – there is no possibility of human error in reading the scale.

The smallest vernier caliper that can be bought off-the-shelf is 150 mm – meaning the jaws open to a maximum of 150 mm. The largest ones go up to 2000 mm.

The vernier scale works on the principle of using alignment of line segments displaced by a small amount to make fine measurements. Human eye can easily detect this alignment of lines which is the main fact that drives a vernier.
A vernier scale has a main scale and a vernier scale. The main scale has the normal resolution with a least count of 1 mm. The vernier scale is attached to the main scale which can slide on it and has graduations that are spaced by the same 1 mm only but are slightly displaced with respect to the marks on the main scale. The displacement is the key here.

When the vernier scale is closed, that is, it is making a 0 measurement, you will see that the zeros of the main scale and the vernier scale coincide but the first mm mark on the vernier is 1/10th mm short of the first mm mark of the main scale. The second mm mark of the vernier is 2/10th of an mm short of the corresponding main scale mark. Similarly the third is 3/10th short, fourth is 4/10th short until the ninth mark which is 9/10th of an mm short. The 10th mark is 10/10th = 1 mm short of the corresponding mark of the main scale and therefore aligns with the previous main scale reading which is 9 (10-1) mm.
Now say you need to measure 5 mm. The zero of the vernier scale will move 5 mm forward and align with the 5 mm mark on the main scale. You will simply take the reading as 5 mm.
Now let us suppose we need to measure a length which is 5.4 mm. You will slide the vernier scale to the requisite length. The zero of the vernier scale will be slightly ahead of the 5 mm mark of the main scale. Thus 5 mm becomes the main scale reading. The amount by which the zero of the vernier is ahead of the 5 mm mark is 0.4 mm which is 4/10th of an mm. The first mark after the zero on vernier scale which was earlier short by 1/10th of an mm will now march ahead by a net distance of 3/10th ( 4/10 – 1/10) of an mm of the corresponding mark on the main scale and will still be misaligned. Similarly, the second one will march ahead by a net distance of 2/10th ( 4/10 – 2/10) of an mm. The third one will be ahead by 1/10th (4/10-3/10) of an mm. However, the fourth one which was previously short by 4/10th of an mm will now march ahead by 4/10th of an mm and come into alignment with the main scale mark. This coincident mark can be seen by the naked eye and can be recorded easily. Thus we say that the fourth mark of the vernier coincides with a main scale mark and thus the vernier scale reading is 4*1/10 = 0.4 mm. hence the total length measurement becomes 5 + 0.4 = 5.4 mm.

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