at the end of the day chasing can be learnt in no time...Apprentices need to be taught electrical work thats why they want to do an ELECTRICAL apprenticeship, then sparks start complaining why people arnt trained properly, BECAUSE THEY HAVE BEEN LEFT TO DIG OUT WALLS ALL DAY LONG. :biggrin5:
Reminds me of a little story when some of us were working in this property and all the walls were build of engineering brick. So to spread the load, everyone picked a room to chase out. The 1[SUP]
st[/SUP] year apprentice came to see me after a couple of hours asking if I could accompany him as there might be a problem. When I got upstairs, I found the dividing wall between the 2[SUP]
nd[/SUP] and 3[SUP]
rd[/SUP] bedroom missing. Calmly told him to tidy his mess up, tell the brickies to rebuild the wall and make sure the back box went in while they were rebuilding it…lol.
And the moral of the story is, chasing and drilling etc. are not menial tasks. There is a lot of skill and technique involved in chasing differed materials, which can only be learned by experience.
During my apprenticeship, there were no such things like battery drills, and we had to drill the holes through joists with a 4ft long hand held auger. That taught you two things:
1: To drill them as horizontally as possible. This allowed you to pull the cable through several joists at the time later.
2: By keeping the cables flat with no twists in them. This would allow you to pull more cables through the holes.
And the moral of that story is, if you run out of space within the holes, you had to drill another set. But I’m glad them days are gone!