EGSA 2026 Course Catalog

Maintenance Professionals and Service Technicians Education Track EGSA created the Generator Maintenance Services program outlined below to address the growing need for a hands-on technical training curriculum. Each level focuses on critical skills needed to perform basic maintenance tasks in accordance with NFPA 110. And while this course is designed specifically to help technicians enhance their maintenance abilities, trend analysis, and troubleshooting skills, it is also an excellent course for end users, sales and account managers, and supervisors, who want to better understand best practices for maintenance and documentation.

Recommended Learning Journey: 4. General Maintenance Services, Level I 5. General Maintenance Services, Level II

6. EGSA’s Onsite Power Generation School (Basic) 7. EGSA Certification Bootcamp or EGSA Prep + 8. Milestone: Apprentice Certification 9. Load Bank Certification 10. EGSA’s Onsite Power Generation School (Advanced) 11. Advanced Triage and Troubleshooting Techniques 12. Milestone: Journeyman Certification

Generator Maintenance Services, Level I Generator Maintenance, Level I focuses on entry level theory, safety, and minor and major maintenance procedures. It includes electrical fundamentals, generator theory, basic introduction to NFPA 110 focusing on major and minor primary maintenance (PM) procedures, basic troubleshooting of the electrical starting system, trend analysis, and documentation (using PM check sheets and logs). Learning Objectives: Upon completion of this course, students will... l Understand basic generator theory, principles of operation, and system functionality. l Perform minor and major maintenance procedures outlined in NFPA 110 to include voltage drop testing and coolant testing

l Perform an observation inspection l Fill out check sheets accurately l Perform an oil, fuel, and air filter change l Read basic schematics l Perform basic troubleshooting and triage techniques

6 | EGSA Course Catalog

Made with FlippingBook - PDF hosting