Production Machinery Reliability Technician

Keep critical machines running at peak performance

Picture this: production is humming when a line stops mid-cycle. You arrive, isolate the issue in a hydraulic circuit, fabricate a replacement part on the lathe, install new piping, and verify the fix with a clean test run. If that scenario energizes you, you’ll thrive here.

Role impact

Our Production Machinery Reliability Technician safeguards uptime for assembly lines, metal-fabricating machine tools, material handling systems, and an automated lubrication system—diagnosing faults across mechanical, pneumatic, and hydraulic domains and restoring equipment to specification.

Core responsibilities

  • Diagnose malfunctions by inspecting machines and subsystems to determine root causes.
  • Disassemble equipment as needed to access and correct issues.
  • Inspect and measure components to identify wear, misalignment, or other defects.
  • Repair/replace worn or faulty parts in drive mechanisms and hydraulic systems.
  • Trace and remediate damaged air or hydraulic piping; measure, cut, thread, and install new pipe.
  • Run and validate equipment after repair to confirm proper operation.
  • Repair broken parts and fabricate or rework components.
  • Set up and operate metalworking tools—lathe, drill press, grinder—to make or repair parts.

Qualifications

  • High school diploma or GED, or five years of related experience and/or training, or an equivalent combination of education and experience.
  • 3–5 years of machinery repair and troubleshooting experience (required).
  • Advanced hands-on experience with hand tools.
  • Working knowledge of pneumatic systems.
  • PLC knowledge is a plus.

Schedule & location

  • Full-time
  • Day shift
  • 8-hour shift, Monday–Friday
  • Auburn Hills, MI 48326 — must reliably commute or plan to relocate before start.

Physical & environmental conditions

  • Regular activities: walking; reaching with hands and arms.
  • Frequent activities: standing; using hands to finger, handle, or feel; climbing/balancing; stooping, kneeling, crouching, or crawling; talking/hearing.
  • Regular exposure to moving mechanical parts.
  • Occasional exposure to heights, fumes/airborne particles, outdoor weather, electrical shock risk, and vibration.
  • Work environment noise is typically very loud.

Benefits

Employment type: Full-time

  • 401(k)
  • 401(k) matching
  • Dental insurance
  • Employee assistance program
  • Employee discount
  • Health insurance
  • Health savings account
  • Life insurance
  • Paid time off
  • Referral program
  • Retirement plan
  • Vision insurance
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