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Pro Tools System Requirements and Compatibility Table of ContentsFor more detailed compatibility requirements and information, both for current Pro Tools versions and legacy versions*, please review this table of contents below to be redirected.

If you are a high school graduate, you can be a machinist. You’ll need approximately 2 years of technical/vocational schooling along with specialized on the job training in an apprenticeship program. You’ll learn design concepts, blueprint reading, and how to work with various cutting, welding, computer controlled and other machining tools. Your employer will provide the training tools and drill bit storage you will need for your job.

Machinists of old were the nuts and bolts guys that built machinery and kept it running. Nuts, bolts, and calipers don’t work without machinists. In today’s computer age, machinists work with technologically advanced equipment but their work has not changed, only some of their tools and techniques. This blog will explain what a machinist is, the tools they work with and what they do.

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** This is where you want to go for detailed compatibility info on HDX, Carbon Systems, MBOX Studio, Sync X, S6, S1 and beyond.

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Machinists use tools to make and repair metal, wood, plastic, and composite parts. This is known as machining. There are a variety of drill bits machinists work with. Drill bit storage is an important part of the machinist’s repartee. The equipment of a machinist cuts through material, similar to a woodworker, to produce the working parts of various machines. Some machinists do jobs not typically thought of in this profession, such as programming and operating machinery.

Machinists go to technical school and get additional on the job training where they often start in an apprenticeship before becoming a master machinist.