Station Engineer

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As a Station Engineer you are charged with keeping steady power and air to the station, as well as fixing the many issues that may occur during a round. You may engage in projects, or just make a relaxing hangout in maintenance. Inevitably, something will break, and that's your department's call to action to keep this station livable.

Equipment

You start in Engineering with a Hard Hat, a T-Ray Scanner, an Engineering Headset, an Engineering Jumpsuit, Tool Belt and an Engineering PDA. Your toolbelt has all the essentials to get your job done. Screwdriver, Wrench, Multitool, Welder, Wirecutters, Crowbar, and cable coil.

The first item you should grab from your department is the ever coveted golden gauntlets. Or more specifically, insulated gloves. These protect against electrical hazards when working with wires or machines. Since you're going to be doing that a lot, you should really get one pair of these. Watch out for inferior, budget copies of the real deal! They won't be in your electrical cabinet, but they might be elsewhere in the department (blame budget cuts).

To go over the less self explanatory equipment: The multitool is a nifty piece of kit, used for all sorts of things! You can change the colors of cable coils, mess with the wires inside various machines, take power readings from wires, and rename SMES units just to name a few! If a door is ever locked and needs to not be, or you're deconstructing it, the multitool will allow you to safely open the door. The optical meson scanner enables you to see station structure and lighting through obstructions so that you always know where you're going and what's damaged without having to accidentally walk into a vacuum-exposed corridor to do it. Cable coils are used while laying new power lines and completing a few constructions; while not always needed, it is best to carry some with you. Hazard vests are bright orange and it enables an engineer to wear an emergency oxygen tank in the suit storage slot, freeing the belt slot for the utility belt. It's smart to get welding protection, and there are options. You can place a welding mask in your helmet slot, welding goggles in your eye slot, or put AR-Es in your eye slot. You can get the latter from the loadout screen or from the Engi-Vend vendor! All of these will protect your eyes, and AR-Es have built in alarm monitoring too!

It is also recommended that you carry a stack of metal and glass with you in your backpack at all times. This will allow you to respond quickly to any station damage that may occur. All this gear can be obtained in the Engineering locker room, which can generally be found on any map by all the lockers on it. If all the metal and glass is gone, more can be obtained from cargo staff like the Quartermaster.

Doing Your Duty

When you get on duty, you should first grab necessary equipment. Being unprepared as an engineer sucks, especially when you're new and have yet to master the art of "figure it out!" while under stress!

Starting the Engine

This is an extremely important task. Sometimes, it is a Supermatter Engine. Make certain you follow the instructions precisely; an engineer who accidentally floods Engineering with phoron is not a popular person. That being said, it is an engine that forgives, and not every mistake is unsalvageable. If it is a Tesla Engine, you're going to need a voidsuit (usually). It also is not an engine that forgives, and while you should double check your work on engines anyways, you should REALLY double check your work to prevent Lady Tesla from going for walkies.

Working the Solars

Read the guide, make sure you have wire, internals and a space suit. Generally not a hard task, and it's good for EVA training new engineers!

Fixing the Station

If there is, indeed, a breach, a broken door, or some other problem you can fix, you can go ahead and do so. Sometimes, you have to a hacking, like breaking into the brig to fix it. Try to communicate with the rest of the crew so you don't make everyone's life more difficult. See Construction for more details. Sometimes you can handle things via a laptop, picking up one of those in the loadout menu, buying one from the vendor, or building one from spare parts is a smart move!

Power Management

Your PDA has a good power monitoring feature to use while running out and about. RCON and the Power Monitor consoles do it waaaaay better. It is a good idea to set up substations, to prevent widespread power cuts if the main source of power is damaged. Read the guide for more information.

Scene Advice

As an engineer, you have access to a number of locations that you might find useful for your scenes. These include a variety of engineering facilities, such as quiet SMES rooms, and the atmospherics rooms. You technically have access to all of the tools that you need to enter any room to set up your scene, but use these sparingly and avoid inconveniencing others, and clean up after yourself! Lastly, you have access to all of the tools that you could need for constructing your own little room that fits just what you need, and easy access to the exterior of the base, for those romantic space walks.

However, if you arrive as an on duty engineer, try to make sure that power is at least stable before you go to scene.

Jobs on Vorestation

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Command Site Manager, Head of Personnel, Head of Security, Chief Engineer, Research Director, Chief Medical Officer
Security Head of Security, Security Officer, Warden, Detective
Engineering Chief Engineer, Engineer, Atmospheric Technician
Cargo Quartermaster, Cargo Technician, Shaft Miner
Medical Chief Medical Officer, Medical Doctor, Paramedic, Psychologist, Chemist,
Science Research Director, Scientist, Roboticist, Xenobiologist
Service & Civilian Intern/Visitor, Bartender, Botanist, Chef, Chaplain, Command Secretary, Janitor, Librarian, Pilot
Station-Bound AI, Cyborg, Maintenance Drone, Personal AI, Ghost, Mouse
ITV Talon Talon Captain, Talon Pilot, Talon Guard, Talon Doctor, Talon Engineer