Mechanical Technician...

WEG Tech
Coventry
2 months ago
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Mechanical Technician

Mechanical Technician

Mechanical Technician

Mechanical Technician

Mechanical Technician (Clear Line of Progression)

Mechanical Technician

Job Description

Mechanical Technician

(Building Services / Facilities)

Salary £36,610 including a £2000 Salary Uplift Allowance + call out pay

  • On-Call Pay (Out of Hours) – 1 Week in 5

  • Over Time Payments (Including during call outs)

    Holiday - 26 Days + 4 Day Christmas + 8 Bank Holiday

    Hours 36.5 Days (Mon-Fri)

    6 Months Sickness Pay

    Professional and Personnel Development

    Skills and Safety Training

    Excellent Staff Discounts – Cinema, Theatre, GYM

    On-Site Parking

    We are seeking a Technician to provide an efficient, business critical mechanical response service and routine maintenance for all plumbing and mechanical building services and associated equipment installed throughout a modern University including heating/ventilation systems.

    The role ensures all statutory, planned and breakdown works are completed safely, cost effectively and to the agreed KPI’s and Service Level Agreement.

    Duties and Responsibilities:

    Technical

  • Respond to individual job requests via the job notification system, ensuring each job is resolved safely, efficiently and to the required standard.
  • Provide an effective and efficient business critical responsive service for all mechanical building services installed throughout the University including heating/ventilation, air conditioning, and gas fired plant, BMS controls, power supplies, lighting systems and motors.
  • Provide a planned maintenance and reactive remedial work service, directing other trades where necessary to keep essential facilities open and usable, including ensuring the efficient and reliable operation of LPHW boiler plant, heating systems, ventilation, air conditioning, refrigeration, and other mechanical and equipment as generated from the computerised docket system on a planned basis.
  • Arranging downtime for plant and equipment, in / out of normal hours.
  • Action work and restore equipment to normal running condition.
  • Monitor / review any work carried out to ensure no faults have been introduced into the system and provide recommendations for altering frequency of maintenance routines. Analyse, fault find and make decisions about the feasibility and logistics of the jobs to be undertaken, considering how long it will take, the equipment needed and the potential cost liaising with the Supervisor if necessary.
  • Investigate unidentified problems, including diagnosing problems and suggesting courses of action and/or identifying whether the problem can be dealt with or if specialist assistance is required.
  • Deal appropriately with emergencies.
  • Provide advice or suggestions in relation to the installation of new products and equipment and participate in the preparation, fabrication and installation of refurbishment, new projects and new work where required.
  • Ensure the correct permits are in place prior to commencing work.

    Health and Safety and compliance

  • Identify and assess potential risk to individual tasks and formulate and/or comply with risk assessments and method statements in conjunction with manager. Complete jobs in a variety of different settings and environments.
  • The role will actively participate in department hazard identification and risk assessment exercises.
  • Part of a team responsible for delivering statutory compliance tasks, ensuring these are correctly delivered and recorded appropriately.
  • Understand and utilise record drawings including asbestos and fire drawings.

    Organisation

  • Prioritise own workload and tasks, taking into account where the problem is, the nature of the problem, the number of people affected and the usage of the building. Take into account access times to spaces and arrange access with security when required.
  • Record resolutions and feedback to problems to work instructions, complete electronic timesheets, service records and other work-related paperwork in priority order.
  • Maintain the tools and equipment for which their team are responsible.
  • Calculate and order the correct amount of materials needed for each job using the ordering system.

    Communication and Customer Service

  • Proactively liaise with Mechanical Supervisors, trades colleagues, contractors, Estates and other departmental staff throughout the University to advise and make recommendations on planned and reactive maintenance, causing minimum disruption to customers.
  • Provide technical expert advice that ensures the provision of a compliant high quality, safe, efficient and effective service.
  • Communicate professionally and effectively with a diverse customer base.

    General

  • Drive University vehicles to transport staff, materials and tools around the University estate.
  • Ensure all works are completed to a high standard and work areas are left clean and tidy on completion.
  • Undertake any other duties as from time to time may be required commensurate with the grade of the post.

    Position Requirements

  • A recognised apprentice background or equivalent training or significant years’ practical working
  • City and Guilds/NVQ level 3 or equivalent in Plumbing and Heating, HVAC/ventilation or Refrigeration.
  • City and Guilds/NVQ level 3 Water Regulations & Unvented Hot Water Systems (3345) (Desirable)
  • Proven ability to carry out a range of plumbing and mechanical fitting activities.
  • To have an excellent understanding of statutory compliance within the mechanical services field.

    This is a great opportunity to part of a Sub Team of Technicians and play a key role in keeping a large academic and research establishment up and running effectively.

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

How Many Edge Computing Tools Do You Need to Know to Get an Edge Computing Job?

If you’re trying to start or grow a career in edge computing, it can feel like you’re navigating a maze of tools, frameworks and platforms — Kubernetes, Docker, IoT frameworks, AWS Greengrass, Azure IoT Edge, OpenShift, TinyML toolkits, networking orchestration, real-time streaming frameworks, and on it goes. Scroll job boards and community forums and it’s easy to conclude that unless you master every buzzword imaginable, you’ll never get a job. Here’s the honest truth most edge computing hiring managers won’t necessarily say out loud: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every edge computing tool — they hire you because you can solve real system problems using the tools you know. Tools matter, yes — but only when they support clear outcomes: reliable systems, performance at scale, secure edge deployments and real business value. So how many edge computing tools do you actually need to know to secure a job? For most edge computing roles, the answer is fewer than you think — and a lot clearer when sorted by fundamentals and roles. This guide shows you what matters, what doesn’t, and how to focus your time wisely so you come across as capable, confident and employable.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Edge Computing Job Applications (UK Guide)

In today’s fast-evolving tech landscape, edge computing is one of the most sought-after fields — blending distributed systems, embedded systems, networking, cloud, IoT, data and real-time processing. But that also means hiring managers are highly selective. They scan applications fast and look for signals of relevance, impact, technical depth and real-world delivery long before they read every line. This guide demystifies what hiring managers in edge computing look for first in your application — so you can tailor your CV, portfolio and cover letter to jump out of the stack. Whether you’re targeting edge systems roles, embedded IoT edge jobs, edge-native data roles, edge platform engineering or edge-AI positions, this checklist will help you position your experience in a way hiring managers can trust immediately.

The Skills Gap in Edge Computing Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Edge computing is rapidly moving from niche concept to critical infrastructure. As organisations deploy connected devices, sensors, autonomous systems and real-time analytics, processing data closer to where it is generated has become essential. From smart cities and manufacturing to healthcare, transport, defence and telecommunications, edge computing underpins systems where latency, reliability and resilience matter. Demand for edge computing skills across the UK is rising steadily — yet employers consistently report difficulty finding candidates who are genuinely job-ready. Despite growing interest and academic coverage, universities are not fully preparing graduates for real edge computing jobs. This article explores the edge computing skills gap in depth: what universities teach well, what they consistently miss, why the gap exists, what employers actually want, and how jobseekers can bridge the divide to build sustainable careers in edge computing.