A setup-focused interview is less of a quiz and more of a working conversation. It tends to start at a table and move to a machine or a program printout. Knowing the flow ahead of time removes most of the nerves, because nothing is a surprise.
How it usually flows
- Experience talk. Which machines, controls, and materials you have run.
- Read a program. They show you a short program and ask what it does, block by block.
- Talk through setup. How you would set work and tool offsets and establish part zero.
- A tool change and first run. Describe doing it safely, and how you would test a new program carefully.
The thread through all of it is reasoning out loud: they want to hear how you think, not just whether you know a code.
What they are really checking
| Stage | What they assess |
|---|---|
| Experience talk | Honest, relevant background |
| Read a program | Fluent code reading |
| Setup walkthrough | Understanding of offsets and tooling |
| Tool change and first run | Safe, methodical habits |
How to prepare
The technical anchor is reading a program without hesitating, which is pure recall you can build in advance. Drill the common G-codes and common M-codes with beginner CNC code practice, then rehearse explaining setup out loud. The station-by-station version is in the CNC setter/operator practical interview, and the full question categories are in common questions asked in a CNC operator interview. Two more worth reading: whether you can use a cheat sheet during a CNC interview, and the common mistakes to avoid during a CNC practical exam. A free tool like G-Code Sprint makes the reading automatic.
Bottom line
A CNC setup interview flows from experience talk to reading a program to walking through setup and a safe first run. Read code fluently and explain your reasoning, and the hands-on part becomes a conversation rather than a test.
Sources
- NIMS (National Institute for Metalworking Skills)
- LinuxCNC G-code reference
- CNCCookbook: G-code and M-code cheat sheet
Frequently asked questions
What happens in a CNC setup interview?
Typically a conversation about your experience, then a hands-on or program-reading portion: explain what a program does, talk through setting offsets, and describe a tool change and a safe first run. They want to see you can set up a job and reason about it out loud.
How technical is a CNC setup interview?
Technical enough to confirm you can read a program and understand offsets and tooling, but interviewers also weigh how you think and communicate. Fluent code reading lets you answer the technical parts confidently and spend your focus on explaining your reasoning.
How do I prepare for the hands-on part of a CNC interview?
Be able to read a program without hesitating and talk through setup steps clearly. Drill the codes so reading is automatic with a free tool like G-Code Sprint, and rehearse explaining your setup logic out loud.
G-Code Sprint is a study and practice tool only. Always follow your instructor, employer, machine manual, and shop safety procedures.