Re: How to get to industry
Hi Peter
Sounds like this is the game for you, there is too much variety & ever changing technology to get bored
your degree knowledge gives you a good start, I think
1st thing your going to need is to become f-gas qualified, there are some adverts on these pages or search for your nearest training centre, your looking to get either city & guilds 2079-01 or citb/cskills j11, best to have at least the one week coarse or if you can afford it the two week coarses are quite common now.
Once you have this you have the minimum legal qualification
next step is work experience, your looking for a company that will not just chuck you in the deep end but a company that will put you with another engineer to start with.
companies that do installation's often take on at this level & you can then start to gain valueable experience or you could try and get a start with a facillities maintenance company & be site based in a team.
once you start to gain experience, you will then get a feel for which part of the industry you would like to be in, all of which can be quite taxing on the brain, which is what I think your looking for
I'm not permitted to advertise but if you browse the site you will notice a member called gary posting reguarly and at the bottom of each of his posts is a link to 'tech method troubleshooting' in blue
Follow this link & your be on your way http://www.refrigeration-engineer.co...rigeration-101
R's chillerman
Re: How to get to industry
Hi Chillerman,
Thank you for your answer. Yeah, I can afford both, with time and money two week courses, so I will be heading this way.
I do have one more very important question. How is the industry during winter times?
Many Thanks
Peter
Re: How to get to industry
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wendigo
Hi Chillerman,
Thank you for your answer. Yeah, I can afford both, with time and money two week courses, so I will be heading this way.
I do have one more very important question. How is the industry during winter times?
Many Thanks
Peter
Hi Peter
can guess your thinking - no work winter time!
its not like that mate, yes hotter climates thrive all year round but we do here too
A/c (most) now have heat pumps much cheaper to run than conventional heating
offices, comms rooms, cold stores, etc etc still need cooling
the way i find it normally works is as the summer ends you catch up on maintenance that has fallen behind due to, summer work over load
maybe a bit slacker in january but normally plenty of work all year round