Electrical CAD Track

Schematics built to EPC project standards

Every module in this track uses real panel schedules and single-line diagrams drawn from live EPC project files. You graduate with a schematic package in the format hiring managers actually open during interviews.

— What you will learn

AutoCAD Electrical, from wire numbers to NEC compliance

Modules cover schematic drafting, panel layout, wire and component tagging, terminal strip design, and report generation — structured around the deliverables your first employer will assign on day one.

The instructor holds an active role at an electrical design firm. Curriculum reflects current NEC standards and the drawing conventions EPC contractors enforce on every project set.

Portrait-oriented close-up of a printed electrical panel schedule document on a drafting desk, columns showing circuit numbers, load descriptions, breaker sizes, and voltage ratings, a red pen resting diagonally across the sheet, fluorescent office lighting, second page of schematics partially visible underneath
Portrait-oriented close-up of a printed electrical panel schedule document on a drafting desk, columns showing circuit numbers, load descriptions, breaker sizes, and voltage ratings, a red pen resting diagonally across the sheet, fluorescent office lighting, second page of schematics partially visible underneath
▸ Capstone project brief

A full schematic package — interview-ready before you leave

The capstone brief mirrors a real industrial project: you produce a complete schematic package — single-line diagram, panel schedule, control schematics, and terminal drawings — formatted to the standard an EPC project engineer expects to review.

Graduates carry a documented deliverable set, not a certificate alone. Employers in panel design and instrumentation firms request this package directly during technical screenings.

Employer relationships built on documented results

Placement isn't a guarantee we print on a brochure. Electrical and instrumentation firms contact us because they know our graduates' schematic packages meet their drafting standards before the first interview.