How did you learn the electrical trade ?
Apprenticeship ABC,IEC,IBEW,In plant
Military
I served an ABC apprenticeship befor WHEELS OF LEARNING when I worked in Freeport TX. Because of the chemical industry in that area it was mostly an industrial program.I also taught motor classes.
Gilbert Fun With Electricity,
Reading,
OTJT,
Lots of conversation.
My Grand-dad was a maintenance tech/electrician years ago when I was a kid, and I got to spend some Saturdays with him in plant, plus he wired some of my Dad's houses when he had time. He was the one who really fired my interest with books and hands-on "trsining". I was wiring garages by the time I was 13.
Then I did 3 years of IBEW Apprenticeship before the big recession of the early 80's. After that I did the independent route and took classes on my own. And still learning...
I started at 17 with a neighbor that did electrical and plumbing work on the weekends.
He knew nearly nothing, what he did know was wrong, and he passed this information on to me. It took longer to unlearn those things than the year or so I worked with him.
It did, however, help me to land a job with "real" electricians.
The rest has been OTJT, & lots of reading.
You really can teach an old dog new tricks. I learn some things from the greenest of helpers almost daily after 30+ yrs
The place I'm
still learning the trade is here at ECN...
...S
... OTJT,and 17 years of jumping from one shop to another.
Russ
Voc tech high school, then 3 years with a small EC. Passed the MA state license and did 16 years in an industrial facility. Currently in my 7th year with a large EC in NEW England. Still learning new stuff all the time. I agree with electure the greenest of helpers can teach you new things.
VoTech HS for electronics, then ~15 years OTJT via several jobs in industrial electronics, like motor controls, drives, PLCs, process control, etc. Picked up residential wiring skills as a DIY and reading the NEC and other books.
After I realized that I could qualify to take the licensing test under the "work experience" provision, I took a license review course at night, and passed the test first time out.
In my last year in the Air Force, I was allowed to cross train to being an electrician since there was no civilian equivalent to my Air Force duties. Upon discharge, I happened to be in the right place at the right time & ended up in the IBEW apprenticeship program.
Tom
My folks bought a two-flat in Chicago just before I was born. Mom & Dad remodeled it, including drywall, plumbing, and electrical. Neither were in the trades, BTW.
Same inspection process as a GC.
One of my first memories was "helping Dad", and reaching into a wall cavity through a 2" x 3" opening to grab the piece of Greenfield my dad was fishing.
As I grew older, Dad taught me more about electrical and plumbing. Mostly basic maintenance type stuff.
In HS, was involved in lighting for stage crew. Did some handyman work for the college I attended as "work-study".
Bought my house and re-ran the internals. My boss at the FD found out I "knew electric", and asked me to wire his garage. Bought one of the "electric wiring" books based on the Code. Eventually bought the Code & Handbook (yay handbook!).
Got a few jobs as a call-in guy for some EC's before taking a correspondence class, and working for one EC regularly enough to challenge the exam.
OJT, I started out as a burgler alarm installer. Way back in '75. Had a fight with a boss and went to work for an electrical contractor. (EC). Worked for him for 8 years took the test and got my own EC's lic. satyed with the boss for at least a year. Worked on the side ( 7 days a week) then finally parted company with the old boss. ( still friends) Went into my own business for 15 years then became an AHJ. I believe that the better AHJ's have had field experience and not just book smarts.
5 year IBEW Apprenticeship local 441 Orange County, CA. After that various JW classes and lots of self study. The company I work for is real big on safety and I have had extensive training in that from them. Also plenty of OTJT!
10,000 Hr Apprenticeship, endless Night Classes and very little pay later, you get to be called an Electrician here, instead of the usual "Boy!".
Won't be doing another one of them though.
Started out as a summer job while in college. Worked three summers then went full time after graduation. I was going to take a year off before finding my true calling. Still at it way many years later!
College algebra classes in high school, electronics classes in college, machine electrician for a few years, 200 hours of self-study on the NEC, passed the test to become a registered electrician and changed my repair/remodeling business into an electrical contracting business (ten years ago).
I'm still learning.
Dave
I'm 19 and i just started attending a trade school in Pennsylvania(No prior experience). I was hoping i would land a job after the course but it seems the next likely step would be an apprenticeship program, because the school is mostly in-the-book rather than hands on.
I started at the age of 7 putting switches and outlets in new resi work that my grandfather's contracting company (union electrical) would do on saturdays. At 16 I became a summer helper and at 19 I became an apprentice thru the local working for my grandfathers company. 43 years later with a city masters license, a state security and fire alarm license and a journrymans card I'm still at it.
Two year AVTI construction electrician program, 4 year IBEW apprenticeship, ongoing OTJT, and biennial continuing education courses.