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Elevator or Escalator Installer/Repairer

What They Do

Elevator and Escalator Installers and Repairers Career Video

About This Career

Assembles, installs, repairs, or maintains electric or hydraulic freight or passenger elevators, escalators, or dumbwaiters.

This career is part of the Architecture and Construction cluster Maintenance/Operations pathway.

A person in this career:

  • Inspects wiring connections, control panel hookups, door installations, and alignments and clearances of cars and hoistways to ensure that equipment will operate properly.
  • Assembles, installs, repairs, and maintains elevators, escalators, moving sidewalks, and dumbwaiters, using hand and power tools, and testing devices such as test lamps, ammeters, and voltmeters.
  • Disassembles defective units, and repairs or replaces parts such as locks, gears, cables, and electric wiring.
  • Checks that safety regulations and building codes are met, and completes service reports verifying conformance to standards.
  • Locates malfunctions in brakes, motors, switches, and signal and control systems, using test equipment.
  • Adjusts safety controls, counterweights, door mechanisms, and components such as valves, ratchets, seals, and brake linings.
  • Reads and interprets blueprints to determine the layout of system components, frameworks, and foundations, and to select installation equipment.
  • Connects car frames to counterweights, using steel cables.
  • Connects electrical wiring to control panels and electric motors.
  • Maintains log books that detail all repairs and checks performed.

Working Conditions and Physical Demands

People who do this job report that:

  • You would often handle loads up to 20 lbs., sometimes up to 50 lbs. You might do a lot of lifting, carrying, pushing or pulling.
  • Work in this occupation involves bending or twisting your body more than one-third of the time
  • Work in this occupation involves use of protective items such as safety shoes, glasses, gloves, hearing protection, a hard hat, or personal flotation devices
  • Exposure to pollutants, gases, dust, fumes, odors, poor ventilation, etc.
  • Requires getting into awkward positions
  • Lighting is either extremely bright or inadequate
  • Conditions are very hot (above 90 F) or very cold (under 32 F)
  • Work in this occupation involves using your hands to hold, control, and feel objects more than one-third of the time
  • Exposed to conditions such as high voltage electricity, combustibles, explosives, and chemicals more than once a month
  • Exposed to hazardous equipment such as saws, machinery, or vehicular traffic more than once a month
  • Work in this occupation requires being inside most of the time
  • Sound and noise levels are loud and distracting
  • Work in this occupation involves standing more than one-third of the time
  • Work at heights above 8 feet more than once a month on structures such as ladders, poles, scaffolding, and catwalks

Working in this career involves (physical activities):

  • Maintaining a body position that prevents falling when in an unstable position
  • Bending, stretching, twisting, or reaching
  • Seeing clearly up close
  • Identifying and understanding the speech of another person
  • Using abdominal and lower back muscles repeatedly or over time without tiring

Work Hours and Travel

  • Regular working hours and limited travel

Specialty and Similar Careers

Careers that are more detailed or close to this career:

  • Elevator Adjuster
  • Elevator Constructor
  • Elevator Mechanic
  • Elevator Repair and Maintenance Technician (Elevator Repair and Maintenance Tech)
  • Elevator Service Mechanic
  • Elevator Service Technician (Elevator Service Tech)
  • Elevator Serviceman
  • Elevator Technician (Elevator Tech)
  • Elevator Troubleshooter
  • Elevator Installer

Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

Support