The Catoosa County News

GNTC grad hired by Spacex to maintain rocket engines

- From Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College

Just back from Cape Canaveral, Fla., where he will soon be working as an integratio­n technician for Spacex, Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College graduate Palmer Moye dropped in on the GNTC Aviation Training Center for one last visit.

Through the GNTC Aviation Maintenanc­e Technology program, Moye, a Rome (Ga.) High School graduate, studied a combined airframe and power plant curriculum, mandated by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA). According to Jon Byrd, program director and instructor of Aviation

Maintenanc­e Technology, the technical skills students like Moye learn at GNTC can be applied across the aerospace field.

“It is no surprise to us at all that Palmer was hired by Spacex,” said Byrd. “He is extremely smart and more than capable of great things in the aviation maintenanc­e industry. We are very proud of him and that he chose GNTC for his aviation maintenanc­e training.”

During his final interview, Moye worked on a Spacex Merlin engine. These engines power the Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets. The Falcon Heavy rocket was the craft Spacex launched on Feb. 6, 2018, to transport a cherry-red Tesla Roadster and its mannequin driver, Starman, into space.

“The work I did at GNTC made working on the rocket engine a piece of cake,” said Moye. “Engines amaze me. They are so big and powerful, but they still need to be handled with care.”

Moye said he was encouraged through the hiring process by Matt Corvey, his first semester aviation maintenanc­e technology instructor at GNTC. Corvey agreed to be a reference on Moye’s applicatio­n, but said the 20-year-old got in on his own merits.

“Palmer is a dreamer,” he said. “I could tell he had a slightly different interest than the other students.”

Moye said the hiring process took around three weeks from start to finish. In the meantime, he has found an apartment in Cape Canaveral that is a 10-minute drive to work and a five-minute walk to the beach. Moye says he will be working third shift, which isn’t an issue for him.

“This is my dream job,” he said. “The best way to step into the aerospace field is through Spacex.”

At the end of the 2020 summer semester, Moye and his classmates graduated the program after a challengin­g spring semester. In order to complete the program and earn the FAA certificat­ions, students must be in class at GNTC’S Aviation Training Center Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

When the COVID-19 pandemic caused nationwide shut-downs, GNTC delayed its classes until it was safe for students to come back on campus. When aviation maintenanc­e technology students returned, they stayed an extra hour every day to make up for the classroom and lab hours missed in order to meet the FAA requiremen­ts to receive certificat­ion.

“This year has been crunch time for sure,” he said. “We have been here nearly every day working to finish the program.”

A graduate of Rome High School, Moye had the opportunit­y to live at home while he was in college. Living at home helped him focus on his education as well as save money. Moye said telling his family the news about Spacex was a big moment and it is something he will never forget.

“They were more than ecstatic,” he said. “There were a lot of happy tears.”

Moye will be the second GNTC graduate hired by

Spacex in the past year. GNTC graduate Dusty Powell began work as a maintenanc­e technician in December 2019 at the company’s headquarte­rs in Hawthorne, Calif. Powell holds two associate degrees from GNTC, instrument­ation and controls technician and industrial systems technology. Along with his two degrees, Powell also holds a level two certified control systems technician (CCST) from The Internatio­nal Society of Automation.

The Aviation Maintenanc­e Technology (AVMT) program prepares graduates for employment in repairing and maintainin­g aircraft. The combined airframe and power plant curriculum, mandated by the Fed

eral Aviation Administra­tion (FAA), is designed to provide students with the technical knowledge and skills required to troublesho­ot and repair aircraft components and systems. Satisfacto­ry completion of all AVMT program courses entitles students to participat­e in FAA airframe and power plant examinatio­ns and certificat­ions.

Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College’s (GNTC) fall commenceme­nt ceremony was held in Dalton at the Whitfield Murray Campus as a drive-thru ceremony on Thursday, Dec. 3, at 5 p.m. Fall semester GNTC graduates from all six campuses were invited to attend the ceremony.

 ?? Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College ?? Palmer Moye, a Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College graduate, is an integratio­n technician for Spacex.
Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College Palmer Moye, a Georgia Northweste­rn Technical College graduate, is an integratio­n technician for Spacex.

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