Qualifications confusion....... | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss Qualifications confusion....... in the Electrician Courses : Electrical Quals area at ElectriciansForums.net

Rob99

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Am currently extending house and will be installing a smart home system throughout. My builder's sparks will be doing whatever is required to comply with regs etc.
I'm also intending to operate the smart home installation stuff as a bit of a future career change/semi retirement business hopefully later this year but I have been trying to work out from all the info out there what I might need to get qualified and/or certified to be able to do my own smart home electrical works in the future. The training providers seem particularly confusing!!
I know I could use a qualified sparks for every installation but I don't want to have to rely on someone else, especially as it will only be ad-hoc work and I know I couldn't expect them to fit in with me when I needed them.
Thanks all :)
 
The main qualification needed to carry out electrical work safely and in compliance with the regulations is an apprenticeship with a competent and experienced electrician, or if possible a few such electricians.
The rest of the available qualifications are additional to this core requirement.
 
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OR, if an apprenticeship is out of the question like it is for me, 2 years of college and work with an electrician, even if it's for expenses or for free. Take a short course with no experience and you'll fall flat on your backside.
 
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Apprenticeships are all well and good if you ever mange to get one and these days are not like the old days where they were plenty & unfortunately with many with families, rent, mortgage etc then finding the odd days as a mate and evening school is the next best option IMO.
 
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Apprenticeships are all well and good if you ever mange to get one and these days are not like the old days where they were plenty & unfortunately with many with families, rent, mortgage etc then finding the odd days as a mate and evening school is the next best option IMO.
when I left school, all there was available was a "modern apprenticeship" which at the time paid a whoppingly massive 40 quid a week if you were lucky, and they expected you to be able to drive. It's the main reason we're in such a mess now. By the time they realised and brought the proper apprenticeship back it was too late. There's limited help for adult learners as well, if you choose to do the correct college route, you have to self fund through Level 2 and you might get a Learning Loan for Level 3. We could only do it because my wife is a university student. It's been tight, I left a tenner an hour job to retrain and we've lived on student finance, tax credits and a few quid of work I manage to get part time.
 
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It seems to me that the only suggestions are for some form of apprenticeship. Realistically that's not an option for me being that I have a family, a mortgage and other responsibilities and very much are not in my twenties any longer!

At the risk of annoying several people, I'm not a numpty when it comes to being half way competent to do electrical works having been involved in some way or other with domestic/residential utilities and services for over 30 years.

There must surely be a sensible approach for people like myself who perhaps have a good understanding of basics but want to "formalise" that knowledge with a qualification which recognises that they have the necessary skills to do electrical work to a safe acceptable standard.

Certainly all the training providers I've looked at never seem to suggest an apprenticeship is the only way to do it. Even apprentices have to attend courses and pass exams and assessments.

My question was really to get some clarity about which courses I should be considering as there is a lot of conflicting information which on the face of it isn't helpful!
 
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It’s all about the experience of the works without the need to ‘blag’ it. There are ways to do things and you can only pick that up from watching and doing, discussing and digesting (information that is).
In domestic, you can’t blag it as there is too much at stake such as a reputation.
I guess I’m just fortunate (blessed I call it) but I kept being in the right place at the right time for the experiences I needed. I hope everyone new gets that too but like I say, I was blessed!
Praise the Lord.
 
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when I left school, all there was available was a "modern apprenticeship" which at the time paid a whoppingly massive 40 quid a week if you were lucky, and they expected you to be able to drive. It's the main reason we're in such a mess now. By the time they realised and brought the proper apprenticeship back it was too late. There's limited help for adult learners as well, if you choose to do the correct college route, you have to self fund through Level 2 and you might get a Learning Loan for Level 3. We could only do it because my wife is a university student. It's been tight, I left a tenner an hour job to retrain and we've lived on student finance, tax credits and a few quid of work I manage to get part time.

I was on £9.50 a week and loved it.
 
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How much were John Players then?
I was on £9.50 a week and loved it.
I remember the last years of school being able to have rice, chips and gravy for 27 1/2p or getting 10 John player for the same and nicking some chips off my mates to supplement the nutrition.
 
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Please do NOT look at the Domestic Electrical Installer courses offered by numerous 'colleges'. They are NOT worth the money. I know, cos' I did one.
I started in 1980 and left some years later to make my fortune.
Having made and lost that fortune (Thank you 2008) I am back again with this ugly bunch, trying to make sense of all these damned regulations.
I thought the DEI course would help me get up to speed, but I was wrong. all it did was relieve me of £4000 and make me more aware of what I didn't know.
I was extremely lucky because I was about to go solo (desperate but bad move). I contacted a local company and was offered an interview (in a pub).
It turns out that our face to face was enough for the boss to trust me to do 1st and 2nd fix AND to mentor me.
Less than 2 months in and I'm doing full house rewires again and CU exchanges, albeit with a senior Electrician present. But I couldn't be happier.
I'm still advertising myself as Localec, but I'm PAYE with my mentor.

I wish you the best of luck but implore you to keep seeking advise from these forums. These guys have been there and done it. Don't end up walking through the same crap they did when they can simply say "don't do that... do this." ;)
 
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To be an electrician you need an NVQ level 3 in electrical installation (a work-based assessment portfolio), and an AM2 (a college-based practical assessment). You'll also need to prove underpinning knowledge, usually with a technical certificate which can be done at a college.

The problems start when you try to beat your own "path"; you might think you need a few modules of a modular course which you can add to at a later date, and there are companies which will sell you whatever you want if you have the money, but you will most likely end up disappointed, possibly even back on here complaining that the company have "ripped you off".
 
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Nothing beats good old experience with a competent qaulified spark or company. I decided to not bother with any mickey mouse courses or these 6 week intensive courses as ive met people from them who have also said they had knowledge in the field already...yet seeing their work it looked like a blindfolded chimp had done it.
 
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