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Qs from a newbie

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Hiya, I'm new to the forum and am thinking of retraining as a domestic electrician/installer (am I right in thinking that strictly speaking you can't call yourself an electrician unless you're qualified to do commercial as well?), and would like to know what folks here think of the idea, given my circumstances.

Bit of background: I'm 41, female, married with 2 young kids (5 and 2 tomorrow), live in Birmingham and have recently taken redundancy from my teaching job. I have a degree in electronic engineering, though all that means is that I'm good at exams - I've forgotten pretty much all of the content and, anyway, my knowledge of domestic electrics is practically non-existent.

Together with my husband I'm a landlord - portfolio grown organically up to now (he moved in with me, his parents moved to a retirement flat, we moved house, and we rented out each vacated house in turn) but we're hoping to grow further over the next few years, including doing some refurb work, so I thought that being able to do my own rewires, PIRs and PAT testing would be useful, and I could also generate a bit of income from doing other domestic electrical work. I've been assured that there's lots of demand for female sparks and I'll never be short of work, and told that the going rate is £60+ per hour (which I'm sure is very optimistic)... but that was by the people offering the training, who of course have a vested interest in getting me to sign up.

I've been looking at what courses are around for mature entrants from outside the trade, and the RF Training 7-week one looks quite good, albeit pricey at £5K + VAT (that does include all the relevant books, exam fees & kit, including a Megger MFT1710). I'm pretty sure I wouldn't qualify for any kind of retraining grants or discounts, so would have to pay full whack. The course includes C&G 2382, Part P, 2392 and Logic Cert. Domestic Periodic Inspection & Testing Award, which I'm told will mean I can do landlords' electrical safety certificates - though I gather from my research on this site that there's no such thing, so I guess he meant PIRs! I also asked about PAT testing and he said they'd include that at no extra charge, although it's not listed as part of the course content.

I understand that employers normally ask for 2391, but given my circumstances and aims, would there be any need for me to do it? They do offer it as an optional extra.

I appreciate that the course doesn't include any on-site experience - there's a lot of practical work but it's all in purpose-built training bays - so I'd hope to spend a bit of time alongside a practising spark before going it completely alone (although the course adviser assured me that I'd be fully competent and confident after just the 7-week course).

Also local to me is the OCLI Domestic Installer course: includes 2382, Part P, 2392-10 and 2377 plus solar PV. So it sounds much the same except that it would enable me to do solar PV (which I can't see myself making much use of, given the imminent drop in FIT payments) but not PIRs. I haven't yet enquired as to course fees or timescales for that one, but I imagine they'll be similar.

What would the additional ongoing / one-off costs be? I'm aware of:
Trade body membership (NICEIC / NAPIT / ELECSA etc.) - £400ish pa
Public liability insurance - about £100pa
Typical additional costs to maintain qualifications???

I'd have £240pw to pay for childcare on top of the course fees, so wouldn't want to spend any longer than necessary with the course not paying for itself! Once qualified, I'd also prefer not to work more than about 3 days a week on a regular basis.

Sorry about the length of this post - if you're still with me then thanks for sticking with it!

What do you reckon - good idea or waste of time & money? RF package better than OCLI one? Any better ideas?
 
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I think that was him having a laugh as he has written in the past supporting more women coming in to the trade.
Made me giggle anyway:)
i like a laugh trev,but sometimes i wonder,nay sometimes i know that this industry is a complete joke..real sparks on the heap and people living in some kind of bubble thinking they can be what ever one day and a spark the next..
 
Lynne, good luck to you! I am sure that most of us wish you well. Just a couple of points not already made. Firstly to set the trade in context the route in to the commercial world is via a 4 year apprenticeship. Broadly speaking it is equally split between site work and theory. I am saying this just to highlight why so many are surprised that anyone thinks a 7 week course will do it. Electricians are one of the more highly educated/ skilled trades and electricians are justly proud of their achievements. The Part P
route you want to persue will allow you to undertake domestic work only. Its quality is questionable at best, but if that is what you wish to do press ahead. Be careful of relying on the training providers, they are selling courses nothing more. Frankly I question their claim on earning potential.

I think your challenge is going to be the practical work. I have a couple of suggestions. Ask around local companies to see if anyone is willing to take you on as an Adult trainee on a part P scheme. They would need to do domestic work and it won't be easy but you need to solve the problem of how to demonstrate that you are competent, so you need installs to show. By approaching local companies you will also get a real idea of your local labour market and what you can realistically expect to earn. You already have an associated qualification, so are more than capable on the theory. Someone may be able to suggest something.

My second suggestion is to contact the ECA. I read recently that they had just launched a scheme to get women into the trade and it was aimed specially at training them to do domestic work. The scheme they launched combines qualifications and a work face, but it does take 2 years. However it is worth a call to them as it will cost you nothing and may assist you in your choice.

As I said good luck, I hope it works out for you. But it is better to be properly qualified whatever you decide.
 
Lynne,

Im a NICEIC Approved contractor based in birmingham, and i can assure you that the only reputable way to become a qualified spark is to go through the 2330, pm me and ill send you my number and if i can offer any ad ice , i will.
 
Thanks all for your advice - yes, I'm rapidly coming to the conclusion that a fast-track course isn't the answer. Will definitely try the ECA as suggested (it mentions "a new electrical qualification for the domestic market which is expected to be launched in early 2012" so I guess they're referring to the 2357 - but it sounds as if they're just sponsoring 12 women who've already started the process), but I might end up abandoning the idea altogether.

My sister is a teacher in a secondary school, and after comparing both our income, I also want to become a teacher, with all the holidays, finishing work by 3:30, I dont get home till gone 10 sometimes and thats with starting at 8:00 every morning. So my advice is to continue as a teacher, and if and when you need an electrician for your properties come along on this forum and advertise the job, I am sure some one on here will come out to help you out.
The grass is always greener, eh! I can assure you that although teachers may appear to have a light workload, that is most definitely not the case. Your sister could well be fairly well paid but as a part-time teacher employed for 0.64 fte (i.e. nominally about 24 hours a week) I was working about 35-40 hours a week on average during term time, so the hourly rate didn't work out all that great overall once all the unpaid overtime - and teachers never get paid overtime - was taken into account. A full-time teacher typically works 55-60 hours a week during term time, and that's not to mention the constant pressure you're under to improve results, behaviour, attendance, etc. Granted, the holidays are good, but even then you spend a fair bit of that time doing preparation and marking (plus you don't get any choice in when you take them).
 
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Hum, the grass being greener. If you're a self employed sparky you will gross between £20 - £35 per hour. You have all the admin to do, all the overheads to cover and still try and work 40 hours per week to make a decent wage, for 46 weeks a year. Guess what all the admin tasks need to be done in the evenings, at the weekends or like me at the moment, during the day when you're not earning.

The grass may be greener but you know why its greener don't you?
 
no I dis agree.
If I have tested the installation before, and I had a complete set of test sheets, drawings at my disposal and I was carrying out a sample test. I think it could be done in that time.
however, how often does this happen????
How long would it take if you hadn't tested it before and had no prior reports and test schedules and not just a sample test? Full PIR, no info to hand just you, your test gear a set of blank forms and a pen.
 
Hum, the grass being greener. If you're a self employed sparky you will gross between £20 - £35 per hour. You have all the admin to do, all the overheads to cover and still try and work 40 hours per week to make a decent wage, for 46 weeks a year. Guess what all the admin tasks need to be done in the evenings, at the weekends or like me at the moment, during the day when you're not earning.

The grass may be greener but you know why its greener don't you?
I'm sorry, I didn't mean to suggest that electricians have it any easier - I'm just tired of hearing people who've never stood in front of a class of kids trotting out the old chestnut that a teacher's job is a doddle. I've worked in industry (mostly an office environment, so I'm still not trying to compare with an electrician's job) for several years too, and I found the teaching a lot more stressful and exhausting for a similar salary. It has its rewards, but it's not an easy option, and whether the rewards outweigh the frustrations is debatable.
 
I'm sorry, I didn't mean to suggest that electricians have it any easier - I'm just tired of hearing people who've never stood in front of a class of kids trotting out the old chestnut that a teacher's job is a doddle. I've worked in industry (mostly an office environment, so I'm still not trying to compare with an electrician's job) for several years too, and I found the teaching a lot more stressful and exhausting for a similar salary. It has its rewards, but it's not an easy option, and whether the rewards outweigh the frustrations is debatable.

Believe you me I wouldn't be a teacher for all the tea in China! especially a secondary school teacher. Its not necessarily the kids its the parents who don't teach their kids right from wrong and respect for their elders, teachers etc
 
If I total all the hours a week I put into my work & running my business it may come to about 100 hrs a week, my mind is never off work, in the evenings it's paper work, invoices, quotes, test sheets and keeping my books.. If you break my hours down into my pay I would probably earn more working in asda! I honestly think at the moment that any other job will be financially rewarding than being a spark.

Just think..I could be any other trade...

Have No test equipment, No part P yearly fees, No books to keep buying, No regs courses to keep studying, No 4 years in collage with all the course fees, Not having the responsibility of putting my name on test certificates to say your house is safe, not risking my life day to day, without all these things I can still earn the same day rate as a spark and customers will pay it no problem, it's ridiculous!

If you want to get a trade behind you because you want to earn a living... Don't become an electrician..
 
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