Industrial Maintenance Technology · Maryland
Industrial Maintenance Technology colleges in Maryland
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Industrial Maintenance Technology trains you to install, troubleshoot, and repair the machinery that keeps factories and plants running, from motors and pumps to conveyors and hydraulics.
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What you'll study in a Industrial Maintenance Technology program
- Reading mechanical and electrical schematics, P&IDs, and ladder-logic diagrams to plan repairs
- Installing, aligning, and rigging industrial machinery, including shaft and coupling alignment with dial indicators and lasers
- Maintaining and repairing pumps, motors, gearboxes, bearings, seals, and conveyor systems
- Troubleshooting hydraulic and pneumatic systems, including valves, cylinders, actuators, and compressors
- Diagnosing electrical faults and servicing motor controls, contactors, relays, and variable-frequency drives
- Programmable logic controller (PLC) basics and interpreting control sequences on automated equipment
- Preventive and predictive maintenance using vibration analysis, thermography, lubrication, and inspection routines
- Precision measurement, fabrication, and welding and cutting for in-plant equipment repair
- Lockout/tagout, confined-space, arc-flash, and other OSHA safety practices around powered machinery
Where a Industrial Maintenance Technology degree can lead
- Industrial Machinery Mechanic
- Maintenance Technician
- Millwright
- Machinery Maintenance Worker
- Wind Turbine Service Technician
- Industrial Maintenance Supervisor
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 industrial machinery mechanics median $63,760).
Industrial Maintenance Technology prepares you to keep heavy production equipment running and to fix it quickly when it fails. Coursework grounds you in mechanical, electrical, and fluid-power systems, then puts those skills to work on real machinery such as pumps, engines and motors, gearboxes, bearings and seals, conveyor systems, pneumatic and hydraulic equipment, and production lines. You learn to read mechanical and electrical schematics and ladder logic, align shafts and couplings, perform precision installation and rigging, balance and lubricate rotating equipment, diagnose faults with multimeters and vibration and thermal tools, and apply preventive and predictive maintenance schedules so breakdowns are caught early. Many programs also cover programmable logic controllers, motor controls, welding for repair work, and millwright tasks like leveling and anchoring large equipment. Where Mechatronics centers on designing and integrating automated systems from sensors, controllers, and software, this field centers on installing, maintaining, and repairing the machinery and electromechanical equipment already running on the plant floor.
Most students enter through a certificate or associate degree at a community or technical college, and many learn on the job through a registered apprenticeship that pairs paid work with classroom instruction; some specialties, such as millwrights and elevator mechanics, have their own apprenticeship tracks. There is no single nationwide license for general industrial maintenance, but voluntary credentials, for example through NIMS, NCCER, or manufacturer-specific certifications in hydraulics, programmable logic controllers, or robotics, can matter to employers, and certain related roles such as elevator and escalator work do require state or local licensing. Graduates work in manufacturing plants, refineries, food and beverage facilities, power and utilities, warehouses, and wind energy, among other settings. A program is preparation, not a guaranteed job, and pay, hours, and demand vary by employer, region, industry, and the experience and certifications you bring, so it helps to research conditions where you plan to work.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of industrial machinery mechanics, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $63,760 and projects employment to grow about 16.1% from 2024 to 2034; a high school diploma or equivalent is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
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