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Thread: New Guests going Pro?
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06-02-2012, 09:16 PM #781
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06-02-2012, 10:47 PM #782
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06-03-2012, 12:28 AM #783
Regular Guest
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- Jun 2012
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- 11
Hi guys new member here. My name is Mike. I have been in the field for 21 years.I got into it by chance. I was looking for a summer job that was not on the farm where I was raised. A friend of the family doing new construction installs. He hired me as a favor to my grand father to get me into a trade. He put me under the house or attic with a hand drawn diagram of what he wanted. At that age $6.00 an hour was plenty of money for me to get myself in trouble with lol. After graduation I went full time with him for another year and then he retired. He put a word in for me at a local company. After that I worked my way from install helper to lead in a couple of years. Moved on to a company that did change out and did PM's as well as installs. On the weekends The owner would let me ride with the service tech for free so I could learn to diag problems and learn how the system actually worked. Went to countless classes at the 2 local tech schools and when a manufacture would come to town with a class I tried to be the first in. I did however learn more when I was hired for a full time service tech. Been a service tech now for 13years. With me starting my own small company I am actual having fun with it. If you call my number at 2:00 A.M sunday morning you will get me. I would of course love to grow my little business but I do not want to grow to fast. I have seen and work for company's that did and it never turned out well.
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06-03-2012, 01:20 AM #784
I was actually a structural engineering student, but I answered an ad for an engineering internship. Turned out to be a mechanical firm and been working for them for over a year and a half now.
I took some HVAC design classes, and went to some free HVAC seminars provided but our electric and gas company. Took a carrier technical class too with all HVAC techs.
I have specified over 100 residential and commercial units.
I also was part of HVAC duct and plumbing design for several restaurants, banks, military facilities, yoga studios, etc...
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06-03-2012, 11:17 PM #785
Regular Guest
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- Jun 2012
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- Ga
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- 20
Hi everyone, I am a new member. I have read hundreds of the threads on this site before deciding to join. I got into the hvac world by mistake and wouldn't go back to being a industrial electrician for twice the money. I took a job working with a ol timer doin install work in a strictly mobile home bussiness. For a couple of weeks of doing thirty trailers a day I realized that the money was in service calls. I didn't take long to catch on. And after five years I've learned tons of info from an ol top. Maybe not the easiest way but if it has worked for him since the seventies it will work for me.
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06-04-2012, 12:07 AM #786
So all he (and now you) works on is mobile home A/C?
How does that work? What do you all do in the winter? Or do you work in the heat too?
OH! I just re-saw that he does mobile home install work. Does he also do service?
What were you doing to the thirty trailers a day? That's 15 minutes each if you work eight hours straight and have a one minute travel time between them.
PHM
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PHM
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06-04-2012, 01:40 AM #787
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- Jun 2012
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- Ga
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I haven't seen a eight day in years. I make a salary to work seven days a week. When your 1500 miles from home there ain't much else to do. We install air conditioners in mobile homes (just evap and cond.) most of our work in new parks. Last winter we worked in north Dakota running service on 2400 bard wall units. I usually do most of our service work. Mobile home service is a lot different than actual residential. I have had to learn that the hard way.
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06-04-2012, 01:41 AM #788
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- Jun 2012
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- Ga
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Oh yeah all the bard units were electric heat, a lot of problems in subzero temps.
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06-04-2012, 04:15 AM #789
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- May 2012
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- 32
well I graduated from high school and didn't really want to go to a 4 year college so i enrolled at a trade school hvac caught my attention and i stuck to it.finished the course couldn't get a job do to my driving record, cleared my record after a couple of year and finally got a job at a ma n pa shop which was great the owner thought me almost everything i know and here i am trying to learn more
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06-04-2012, 04:18 AM #790
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- May 2012
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06-04-2012, 09:25 AM #791
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- Jun 2012
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They always have low voltage issues. Mostly due to mobile home manufacturers don't have a clue.
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06-04-2012, 11:10 AM #792
I used to travel a lot doing industrial and very low temp work
But I soon found that it Seemed beforehand like it was going to much more pleasant than it actually ever was. I always loved the work, a lot of it was one-off, and some experimental, but I disliked living in hotels and strange women. Nothing but the actual work appealed to me and I got stuck in foreign countries a few times so after a while I just stopped doing it.
It makes me laugh now when people question whether I am competent enough to repair their walk-in box or something like that because I used to work on very complicated equipment about the size of a railroad locomotive.
PHM
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PHM
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06-04-2012, 12:19 PM #793
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- Jun 2012
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- Ga
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I enjoy traveling most of the time. I pull my rv every where and it doesn't hurt that my wife stays most of the time. I always take off two weeks at christmas and four weeks every summer. Our comp. Is pretty small (6 employees and only three of us are full time) so I get paid vacation for six weeks a year. I don't know what im gonna do when the owner closes up shop next year for retirement.



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