- Location
- Simi Valley, CA
Growing up, I wanted to be an astronaut. I'm still trying to find someone at NASA to vouch for me.
I'll vouch for you. I always thought you were a little spacey.
Growing up, I wanted to be an astronaut. I'm still trying to find someone at NASA to vouch for me.
Growing up, I wanted to be an astronaut. I'm still trying to find someone at NASA to vouch for me.
Michigan=8000 hrs documented OJT under licensed Journeyman or higher to sit for Journeyman test. 4000 hrs as lic. jour. ele. to sit for Master Ele. test. Must have "Master of Record" signed on to get Contractors.
So if I wanted to try and get my license in 6,7 8ish years I would need field experience. Working for an electrical contractor in an office would not suffice? This is NY. Thanks
I would think that would probably suffice as long as your doing electrical related work in the office, such as estimating
No offense to anyone but if you're going to be called a licensed master electrician then you should actual have hands on experience in electrical work. Credit for estimating or education shouldn't really matter if you've never worked in the field with your tools.
This is just my opinion but I think you could use part of the time needed for a license doing office work such as estimating. In this state ( GA ) electrical training, schools or even military experience can be submitted as experience and then the board gets to determine if the experience is acceptable.
The problem is this. You are trying to get a license that would allow you to actually do hands on electrical work. So a certain amount of field work would be necessary.
Why not look into some sort of vocational training at night. They will allow you to use tools in a hands on environment. After any vocational type training then you could probably find some sort of part time work that would allow you to get field experience.
This is just my opinion but I think you could use part of the time needed for a license doing office work such as estimating.