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#44890 11/14/04 08:02 PM
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 186
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Does any of our regulars here work in the new res. construction type of work. If so what kind of tricks or tips might you have?

As i state below i work as an employee so the biz. end of it i dont really get to conserned about im looking into tip or tricks to make life easier etc!

[This message has been edited by NJ Wireman (edited 11-18-2004).]

#44891 11/14/04 09:07 PM
Joined: Apr 2001
Posts: 507
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Member
My tip is to get into commercial/industrial. There is more profit to be had. [Linked Image]

Seriously though, residential is very competitive here. Very hard to win a job and come out with any profit.

As a result I don't remember the last time I wired a house. It has been a few years at least.

GJ

#44892 11/14/04 11:20 PM
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 186
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I really dont look so much as to the biZ end of it as i work as an employee for a company. Over here in New Jersey we are in a building boom in the last few years and it shows no signs of slowing done, so for me this is great job security.

#44893 11/15/04 09:52 AM
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 335
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Member
I half agree with GJ. New residential construction just doesn't seem like the way to go. To easy to lose your shirt or become career locked. However; residential service is real lucrative in my area (DC/VA/MD suburbs). If you sell yourself, homeowners around here won't bat an eyelash over paying for T&M work. If they are repeat customers, they seldom even question us. The key is to sell yourself/company. Get caught "messing over them" (like the way I cleaned that phrase up?)and you're toast.

#44894 11/18/04 12:16 PM
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 186
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I wanted to bumb this back up top to give it a second chance to see if anyone else out there wants to reply.

#44895 11/18/04 12:42 PM
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Anonymous
Unregistered
I'll take a stab at your post. I don't know if I can help with the easier part but here's a couple thoughts on being efficient.

Repetitive, Repetitive, Repetitive.
When you get to the job site have all the material for the day unloaded and in the structure. Have one guy that does the lay out and mark for home runs. Have one guy that nails boxes. Have one guy that drills out. ( Meaning fire up the drill and don't stop till your done.) Have one or two guys that pull out with the romex on hung or stud mount spinners. With home runs done first. Have one or two guy's that strap, strip and make up complete at each box. Have one guy build the service complete and make up the panel.

The fewer trips that need to be made to each room the better. The fewer trips made out to the van the better.

Henry Ford had a great idea with the assembly line idea. The more ways you can think of to run the job in an assembly line manner the more efficient you will get.....Then big raises....Employee of the year award.....All expenses paid trip to Las Vegas......

[This message has been edited by kentvw (edited 11-18-2004).]

#44896 11/18/04 02:59 PM
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 200
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Member
Are we talking about detached woodframe homes?

Or residential concrete highrise?

I work for a company that does LOTS of the highrise flavour. Assembly-line style is the norm. Usually the crew is spread out over 3 floors.

Timing the material orders is key. Try to get one skid of boxes & fittings, and one skid of wire dropped per floor before the plumbers are done.

One guy does layout with a marked stick and black felt marker. Two guys mount boxes/panels and run the ENT chunks from the stub-downs in the ceiling. Two guys pull all the wire (pull wire & BX). Next, about 4-6 guys hit the floor to splice, secure the BX, pull string for the data runs, and terminate the panels. (Try to keep the data guy & panel guy on that task for a whole floor for accountability.)

Do the drill 30-35 times and the building's done [Linked Image]

#44897 11/18/04 03:39 PM
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 1,143
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Member
Kent's got the right idea... if you're running a big enough crew.

As the "second man" in a two man crew, I'd work room-to-room. While my foreman was running HR's or dedicated circuits, my job was to

Go around to all the spotted positions and place 1900's..

Get a rough measure on how many sticks we'd need for the room.. then go get 'em

Measure and drill the studs or cap plates for the run...

Start measuring, bending, and cutting to make it all connect...

Tie into the HR box... if it wasn't already, stub up (or down, depnding on obstructions) for the HR. <TIP> We used deep 1900's (4" square by 2 1/8" deep vs. the usual 1 1/2") and 3/4" EMT for all the HR's.

Another tip - D1900's for dimmers and GFCI's...

A lot of the tips are "method specific" - my tips about EMT are worthless for folks that run NM all day.

#44898 11/18/04 04:52 PM
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 186
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Its all romex over here for the area i work only other part is some are smart homes, as well as we do phone/data and cable.

#44899 11/18/04 07:36 PM
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 1,457
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Member
Tips of the day: Fill all device screw holes on the boxes with plumbers putty on rough. Wire the basement lighting FIRST, install a pigtail on the circuit and plug into temp power setup.


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