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| pompousporcup... |
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 pompousporcup... World Chat Champion
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| lihp |
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 lihp World Chat Champion
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| pompousporcup... |
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 pompousporcup... World Chat Champion
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| dodsi |
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 dodsi Dirty Carny

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| J4mes |
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 J4mes World Chat Champion
Joined: 18 Mar 2011 Karma :  
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 Posted: 11:15 - 20 Jun 2016 Post subject: |
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The proper way to do it is to become and apprentice. You'll get the qualifications, the practical experience and hopefully if you're with a good teacher you get the time savers, the work-arounds and the other tips and tricks that you develop when you've spent a long time in a job and come across most situations.
Alternatively you can sit the C&G courses on your own or as part of a "become an electrician in 5 weeks and earn £50K/year" school and hit the ground with no fucking clue about the real world of the job.
I wouldn't sat wages are low, as it depends on what you end up doing. If you're house-bashing building new estates then sure, you're competing with the foreign labour. Go it alone, or move in to the commercial/industrial/agricultural sectors then its a different kettle of fish.
I don't use an electrician because I sat an electrical apprenticeship (16th edition, 2391 etc) but I've had a lot of work done on my house and I can tell you that when I find a decent, reliable, quality plumber/plasterer/landscaper/flooring fitter I don't mind paying good money for them, getting them back for more work and recommending them to others. And that's what you need, because I've dealt with some utter shits and I'd never have them back or recommend them! |
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| pompousporcup... |
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 pompousporcup... World Chat Champion
Joined: 15 Apr 2015 Karma :   
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| faffergotgunz |
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 faffergotgunz Nova Slayer

Joined: 10 Feb 2016 Karma :    
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 Posted: 12:37 - 20 Jun 2016 Post subject: |
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Building site sparks - fun for a while but gets boring. Plus if you are subcontracting you never know if you will have a job the next month.
House bashing - bit more fun but seriously gopping when you are crawling through a loft space for the 1000th time. Bit more blaggable on time. 25k ish if you work for a company (might have changed now). A good earner if you go out on your own but committing and hard work.
Maintenance (van based) - 25k ish again, maybe 30k sub contracting. I enjoyed this type of work as it was easy, very blagable on time, plus you could pick up a little weekend work now and again off clients (naughty )
Maintenance (on site) - 25-35k plus. shift work. This is what I do now. Lots of training available if you are with the right company. Clean, easy but you are there for the hours/shift. From my experience this would be a good bet for a new qualified sparks, as long as you are multi skilled and handy with other maintenance.
Getting certified (to do your own work) in a nutshell...
- do courses
- buy tools, tester and van (a good few thousand)
- do a couple of free jobs (test them and keep it all above board) - you will find out which jobs to do when you start training to comply with part p ect..
- enrole with a certified scheme (NICEIC, Elexa, Napit ect...) £500 quid a year
- an inspector will inspect you
- advertise (shit), work of mouth (good)
Its not that easy, pricing jobs, doing your taxes. Fecking effort!
Cash in hand jobs are your best bet while you work for a company as a sparks. Lot less faff and you can take it or leave it.
If i was to do it all again, bollox to trades, I would have become a Ferrari test driver  ____________________ Sent from Samsmums mobile using Tapanarse |
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| Mark_F |
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 Mark_F Crazy Courier

Joined: 22 Jul 2013 Karma :     
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 Posted: 15:59 - 20 Jun 2016 Post subject: |
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I personally would recommend against doing this.
Construction work is very volatile, and training is generally on you (especially if companies cannot get any "apprentice" cash for you due to age etc). It could be worthwhile IF you know someone in a good position within a company who can get you on under the right terms. If you don't know such a person, you'll be treated like a mug from the off.
Most companies require you to be recognised by the JIB before they will pay you the proper rate. If you are undertaking the training on your own as you subcontract, it can be difficult to get the NVQ the JIB require (as work based assessments must be done, with it being a lottery as to whether the company/foreman/site agent you're working under will allow you to do it).
Welfare facilities at their best will probably look really rough to you.
If you end up on agencies books, they never pay the money they promise (their excuse is they tell you the self employed rate, however they cannot pay you as self employed thus make you pay the employers NI, and you are charged a fee to recieve your wage, done through Umbrella companies).
I worked in the commercial and industrial sectors (mainly commercial) and the summer holidays are the main peak work weeks due to school refurbs. Christmas to April tend to be the leanest months, though it only takes a smidge of luck to have enough to get by.
Bear in mind that you will be doing a lot of metalwork (most people have no idea what electricians do).
You may make the jump and find it works for you (the job can be rewarding etc), but the pay and conditions are beyond crap, and obviously the work can be quite dangerous (the risks you take are up to you, some managers are willing to be a bit loose when it comes to your safety, you need to know your limits, how and when to say no, etc. There are good people in the industry too though).
I stopped this year as I am unable to do the job anymore, and had I had any idea what I was getting into, I wouldn't have put the money I did into training. There are things I have liked, but on the whole it isn't remotely worth it IMO. Should you take the jump I hope you have better luck than me.
Edit to add a phrase a good friend uses a lot: "It takes a certain level of intelligence to be an Electrician, and that happens to be enough intelligence to know that there are far better things you could be doing with your time".
Last edited by Mark_F on 16:15 - 20 Jun 2016; edited 1 time in total |
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| drzsta |
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 drzsta World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Apr 2009 Karma :     
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| TheArchitect |
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 TheArchitect World Chat Champion

Joined: 26 Dec 2013 Karma :   
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| robs321 |
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 robs321 Could Be A Chat Bot

Joined: 24 Feb 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:57 - 20 Jun 2016 Post subject: |
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Be a plumber! same shit, more money!
I think people have a rose tinted view of what being an electrician involves. I've been at it 32 years and the whole industry has turned to shit.
Your knees wont love you for becoming a sparks and I'm waiting for carpel tunnel opp number 4!
I try and spend my time these days running sites and avoiding working for a living but last week, I was stuck in a loft void covered in insulation kneeling on 50mm joists thinking why the fuck am I still doing this shit at my age.  |
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| Alan1986 |
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 Alan1986 Spanner Monkey
Joined: 02 Jan 2016 Karma :  
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| pompousporcup... |
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 pompousporcup... World Chat Champion
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| Dave500 |
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 Dave500 Traffic Copper
Joined: 26 Feb 2014 Karma :    
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 Posted: 19:35 - 20 Jun 2016 Post subject: |
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I'm currently doing my plumbing and heating apprenticeship and the job is looking good to be fair. I started the course when I was 24 so I think the company had a free year of tuition and now I'm 25 they have to pay for the second year. I think if you want to be earning 35k you'd have to get into gas and then you could possibly come up a little short. (but the weekend jobs I hear pay well)Fortunately we tend to do industrial and commercial so no really nasty jobs. But the apprenticeship's are certainly the way forward, I would ignore the "within 6 weeks you'll be a fully qualified plumber earning 40k+" bullshit. ____________________ Bye bye Z hello Versys  |
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| Alan1986 |
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 Alan1986 Spanner Monkey
Joined: 02 Jan 2016 Karma :  
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| Chuffin Nora |
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 Chuffin Nora World Chat Champion
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| Dischord |
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 Dischord World Chat Champion

Joined: 08 May 2005 Karma :  
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| roboff94 |
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 roboff94 Renault 5 Driver

Joined: 03 Jan 2015 Karma :     
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 Posted: 20:01 - 21 Jun 2016 Post subject: |
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I just finished my apprenticeship last year, started straight from school at 16. Did my ONC, HNC and nearly finished my HND now, aswell as all the relevant NVQ's. I work in the maintenance department at a petro chem site, so we do alot of instrumentation aswell as electrical stuff, dont really do much electronics unless we need to.
I enjoy it, always have done so far, maybe in 10 years i'll be sick of it but for now i like it depends what sort of stuff youre into, if your not that interested i imagine its pretty boring....
I think an apprenticeship is the best way to get into it after my experience, dunno how old you are, but at my place theyre not interested unless youve just finished school, so that might be an issue... ____________________ '88 Honda H100 SII - 89' Honda VFR400 NC30 |
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| 331X2 |
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 331X2 Crazy Courier
Joined: 10 Jul 2013 Karma :  
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 9 years, 194 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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