Retired commercial electrician here. Today schooling for an electrician takes five years along with working for at least four years to get your license as a journeyman electrician. At that stage you're ready to start learning how to do real electrical work. It often takes a drafting course or two just to learn how to read blueprints. I've worked on polar cranes inside nuclear reactor domes. I've run bus duct up 73 floors in skyscrapers. I've piped and wired hundreds of buildings over forty years in the trade. Even worked on off shore drilling rigs. It all takes time and dedication to learn the skills needed. It's not something you can learn from watching a few videos. My kids watched me build and wire our first home and even as teens they learned enough to wire a house. Yes it's simple enough for children to do. Not so much commercial work. However home handymen should be aware of the dangers involved in doing electrical work themselves, both to themselves and to their homes if not done properly.
@@sparkypom2547 True but a commercial electrician can wire a home with ease and a residential hand may not even know how to bend pipe or hook up transformers. I would imagine it's pretty rare for a residential hand to build a stress cone or cad weld a grounding grid.
Fitted a load of Next light fittings to my sons new build home replacing pendants everywhere 10 or 11 of them, many different types. All well made, well wrapped and easy to install even then ones I had to remove pendant chains from or shorted pendant support cables. All came with push fit connectors so you can wire one side without having to support the light. Very impressed by them. Builder got some cudos by installing largish boards between joists just above plasterboard so firmly and easily attaching a variety of sizes of lights without needing a single plasterboard fixing was amazing. They lost all cudos with too much bare conductor in every ceiling rose and by not terminating any live cable in outside lights terminal boxes just cut cables coiled inside a cheap external box with pull off covers! Not clever. Many in reach of children. So a C2 fail at least I would say maybe a C1?
Hey i am an electrician in Pakistan, seen your videos and i am really impressed by your work, tools and standards of your country👍wish i could work with you
As always a great video. I was a bit surprised you put a wire on top of the rafter in the garage as very often these are used for storage and they could very easily get snagged or damaged. They certainly would in my garage
Totally professional Cory is a natural on camera. When you hear a about NHS doctors workers etc banging on about training for 7 years. People forget how long it takes to achieve your high standards. Well done Jordan you set the standards expected.
This content is absolutely fantastic!! That white board is a wonderful idea! Keep the good work up, learning buckets. Especially as a production electrician coming from Live events and temporary installation. 👏🏼👏🏼
Left the trade 12 years ago with 16th edition due to a series of redundancies, is there any advice for getting back into the trade? Great videos, looks like you guys have a good laugh working together.
so i really want to become an apprentice, but im worried if i find one, ill have to travel 1.5 hours or so really far out where the boss doesnt mind as hes used to it but if im having to travel far each day to different locations kind of find that daunting
Don't let that daunt you. 90 minutes really isn't that long, and to get experience, it really makes it worth while. Once you're fully qualified, you're able to pick from further options. If the travel is a cost issue, there are (or at least used to be many moons ago) options for help toward the cost.
Enjoyable video. Could someone explain a little more about the connections in the 3 amp FCU to the lights as regards to the socket cable please. As I understand it goes to the supply side of the FCU and then 1.5mm T&E comes off the load side to the lights. How do the sockets get their power (brain block 😁 unfortunately) Many thanks John
White board is V good. Otherwise apprentices will not benefit very much. The more detail you show the better on camera and on white board . Thats what apprentices are watching this channel for. Thanks for sharing.
Wow, looks like an unfinished new build that you’ve come to save the day on. I’ve watched so many of those shocking build standard videos that I’m wondering how many issues there are in that room!
I guess it's in the regs, but could you explain (in a future video?) why you have conduit on the walls, but not in the rafters. My garage was wired around 1990 when the house was built, so no conduit is used. Should I consider getting this changed? Garage consumer unit was replaced around 2005 -2010. I understand that regs do not need to be applied retrospectively, but may where old wiring is modified because of new works.
Thanks for your explanation, i keep meaning to look at my garage lights which we're done by the previous home owner (i think). They turn on and off at each switch but also kill the other switch in the process, so turn them on at the entrance to the garage then off at the garage door then the entrance does not work and vice versa.
So what you’re saying is two switches, the lamp is only on when both switches are in a certain position, and if either switch or both are in the other position it’s off?
@@hfs83 it depends how it’s wired exactly what could be wrong, anything from a completely miswired installation to a single wire that has come loose. So… yeah, troubleshooting ahead.
Should be pointed out these masonry screws should just be hand tight or “no duggas” 🤣 tight if you’re using an impact driver otherwise the screw will lose its grip in the material
Yesterday on the 17th of July I commented "Sorry, what's a radial?". Today is the 18th of July and here you are answering the question in this video which was, incidentally, posted tomorrow on the 19th. I always wondered what the future would be like. Now I know. God, I love this timeline. Except I missed the part where you explained what a radial is. Unless it's just a branch circuit, in which case why not just call it that. Or tell me what it's called in Canadian Electrician. I looked it up. It's just a branch circuit.
Is it right to use a switched connection unit as a light switch per se? A plate switch (MK's spec) is spec'd with 100,000 operations 'mechanical life' as it is designed for multiple switching in its life (they also spec number of operations for electrical life by load current). They don't spec the 'fused spur' with a lifetime for number of operations? Guess you'd not see too much of an issue in a garage as a low-usage area, but.....
I presume a light switch contacts are rated at 6A,a switch spur contacts are at least 13A ,the two lights are rated no more then 0.5A,so working out how many each switch will last on the number of times they will be turned on before they breakdown is completely irrelevant
To add an anecdotal data point, I've got some FCUs in a workshop that are used as light switches. They're operated every single day and haven't had an issue in the 30+ years since they were installed.
@@havoctrousers I like that - don't make them like they used to!! My only point was really that when a manufacturer expects use for multiple operation (rather than just isolation), it is possibly why they do or don't rate number of operations. To be fair, is an 'isolator' the same as a 'switch'? Try getting a manufacturer to answer the question!! It's nice to spark a debate...
Would it not be better to have a Mini CU in the Garage to be able to separately isolate all the sockets in the Garage ? Nice to see a Dad and his Son working well together.
It's a 16A RCD protected feed to the garage for the sockets. Adding a fused spur off those sockets for the lights as they have is all that's needed. Adding another board would be total overkill.
Can we guess how much the invoice was for that job? 2 light swap outs, 2 new lights, 2 conduit drops, 2 new sockets. I wanna say parts and labour.... £600.
Hi you could drop the neutral out of the board for that circuit and you can work on it without tripping the RCD. Also you may not have to earth both ends of the SWA but it’s good practise to terminate it properly with a gland.
Hello, I like your job. I’m in UK, I study Electrical Engineering in my country Nigerian, And I have experience on electrical wiring.But I don’t have UK experience,Can you help me out?
Cables just clipped down a brick wall (I can see you are adding coduit now) , thats acceptable in the UK? Seriously, why you you use trusses in such a tiny garage? Might as well have got some height with a collar roof.
2708 (l1) 2365 (l2/l3). However they’ve just brought out 8707(I think that’s the new code?) that has replaced 2365 level 3 as far as I know, if you have never archived a level 3 qual you can get that year for free. 2707 + 2365 l2 are £2700 for one year. Unless on UC. If you want to know more you can contact me
@@shamreazahmed8170 I enrolled through my local college as it was cheaper and better plus it wasn’t a short course. I have highly valued my education and not learning in 5 minutes…
I've just stopped watching this when i realised it was "Artisan Electrics". Reason being that i watched a video in the past, titled why solar panels are bad or something to that effect. It turned out to be click bait. Personaly i think this is dishonest and disrespectful to viewers.
Fitted a load of Next light fittings to my sons new build home replacing pendants everywhere 10 or 11 of them, many different types. All well made, well wrapped and easy to install even then ones I had to remove pendant chains from or shorted pendant support cables. All came with push fit connectors so you can wire one side without having to support the light. Very impressed by them. Builder got some cudos by installing largish boards between joists just above plasterboard so firmly and easily attaching a variety of sizes of lights without needing a single plasterboard fixing was amazing. They lost all cudos with too much bare conductor in every ceiling rose and by not terminating any live cable in outside lights terminal boxes just cut cables coiled inside a cheap external box with pull off covers! Not clever. Many in reach of children. So a C2 fail at least I would say maybe a C1?
How to be an electrician. 1st & only lesson, criticise everyone that has worked in the house before you. No further lessons needed ;-)
It's all kicking off in the comments section...
Retired commercial electrician here. Today schooling for an electrician takes five years along with working for at least four years to get your license as a journeyman electrician. At that stage you're ready to start learning how to do real electrical work. It often takes a drafting course or two just to learn how to read blueprints. I've worked on polar cranes inside nuclear reactor domes. I've run bus duct up 73 floors in skyscrapers. I've piped and wired hundreds of buildings over forty years in the trade. Even worked on off shore drilling rigs. It all takes time and dedication to learn the skills needed. It's not something you can learn from watching a few videos. My kids watched me build and wire our first home and even as teens they learned enough to wire a house. Yes it's simple enough for children to do. Not so much commercial work. However home handymen should be aware of the dangers involved in doing electrical work themselves, both to themselves and to their homes if not done properly.
wait, so i'm not a licensed electrician now that i've watched this? damn!
Commercial and domestic are very different environments and skill sets,
@@sparkypom2547 True but a commercial electrician can wire a home with ease and a residential hand may not even know how to bend pipe or hook up transformers. I would imagine it's pretty rare for a residential hand to build a stress cone or cad weld a grounding grid.
Fitted a load of Next light fittings to my sons new build home replacing pendants everywhere 10 or 11 of them, many different types. All well made, well wrapped and easy to install even then ones I had to remove pendant chains from or shorted pendant support cables.
All came with push fit connectors so you can wire one side without having to support the light. Very impressed by them.
Builder got some cudos by installing largish boards between joists just above plasterboard so firmly and easily attaching a variety of sizes of lights without needing a single plasterboard fixing was amazing.
They lost all cudos with too much bare conductor in every ceiling rose and by not terminating any live cable in outside lights terminal boxes just cut cables coiled inside a cheap external box with pull off covers!
Not clever.
Many in reach of children.
So a C2 fail at least I would say maybe a C1?
"So glad they put brown sleeving on the brown" 🤣🤣 Cory is too funny 🤣
Yh he is lool
😝
Hey i am an electrician in Pakistan, seen your videos and i am really impressed by your work, tools and standards of your country👍wish i could work with you
Thank you Big Mac and Rooben! Nice to see father and son 😀😀😀😀 together again.
Now that Cory is back, if you would like the hilarious 'laugh out loud' bits, here they are!
00:47 03:44 04:38 09:31 12:32 19:25
As always a great video. I was a bit surprised you put a wire on top of the rafter in the garage as very often these are used for storage and they could very easily get snagged or damaged. They certainly would in my garage
Totally professional Cory is a natural on camera. When you hear a about NHS doctors workers etc banging on about training for 7 years.
People forget how long it takes to achieve your high standards. Well done Jordan you set the standards expected.
I honestly can't tell you enough how much your videos help me.... Just THANK YOU 👍
This content is absolutely fantastic!! That white board is a wonderful idea! Keep the good work up, learning buckets. Especially as a production electrician coming from Live events and temporary installation. 👏🏼👏🏼
Love how you explain everything on a whiteboard. Helps a lot ! Thank youuuu!!!!
John Ward style
definitely the best electricians in Artisan Electrics keep up the good work!
Good to see you Cory and Reuben work so well together.
👌🏼
Left the trade 12 years ago with 16th edition due to a series of redundancies, is there any advice for getting back into the trade? Great videos, looks like you guys have a good laugh working together.
'Let's see if I can kick this wasp out of the place' - this really had me laughing xD The cameraman really does manage to capture the beauty
Reuben is the luckiest man in the electrical industry at this point
so i really want to become an apprentice, but im worried if i find one, ill have to travel 1.5 hours or so really far out where the boss doesnt mind as hes used to it but if im having to travel far each day to different locations kind of find that daunting
Don't let that daunt you. 90 minutes really isn't that long, and to get experience, it really makes it worth while. Once you're fully qualified, you're able to pick from further options. If the travel is a cost issue, there are (or at least used to be many moons ago) options for help toward the cost.
"look at that lil rooben's well happy" - Cory Big Mac
Enjoyable video.
Could someone explain a little more about the connections in the 3 amp FCU to the lights as regards to the socket cable please.
As I understand it goes to the supply side of the FCU and then 1.5mm T&E comes off the load side to the lights.
How do the sockets get their power (brain block 😁 unfortunately)
Many thanks
John
What a channel, love it lads keep it up :D
Glad to see you Cory !
Good to see you too Ted 😎
White board is V good. Otherwise apprentices will not benefit very much. The more detail you show the better on camera and on white board . Thats what apprentices are watching this channel for. Thanks for sharing.
Why are you using the fire rated d-line conduit clips if it's in a garage and not even a fire escape plus it's domestic as well??
Nice simple explanations of such things are always a great help for those of us who’re just starting our courses!!!… much appreciated 👍
You’re welcome 😇
when you guys touch someone elses work, do you just refit fitting back on? ¿ or do you re terminate and then refit? Thanks! :)
Love Spanish question marks!
although you don't have to earth both sides of the armour aren't you at least supposed to gland both ends?
Wow, looks like an unfinished new build that you’ve come to save the day on. I’ve watched so many of those shocking build standard videos that I’m wondering how many issues there are in that room!
Well how to get an ecs card in this manner
I love that milwaukee is getting back in your lineup of tools
🪛🔨
I guess it's in the regs, but could you explain (in a future video?) why you have conduit on the walls, but not in the rafters. My garage was wired around 1990 when the house was built, so no conduit is used. Should I consider getting this changed? Garage consumer unit was replaced around 2005 -2010. I understand that regs do not need to be applied retrospectively, but may where old wiring is modified because of new works.
@PETER WILSON Thank you.
Oh wow, I didn't realise they made those heely shoes in adult men's sizes. I know what I'm ordering!
Yes king 👑
Ride in style ✊
What make are your boots mate
Thanks for your explanation, i keep meaning to look at my garage lights which we're done by the previous home owner (i think). They turn on and off at each switch but also kill the other switch in the process, so turn them on at the entrance to the garage then off at the garage door then the entrance does not work and vice versa.
One of the 3 way switches is wired wrong.
So what you’re saying is two switches, the lamp is only on when both switches are in a certain position, and if either switch or both are in the other position it’s off?
@@JasperJanssen that is correct.
@@hfs83 it depends how it’s wired exactly what could be wrong, anything from a completely miswired installation to a single wire that has come loose. So… yeah, troubleshooting ahead.
@PETER WILSON delusional. 2 way switches that want to be 3 way. Dont be dumb
Should be pointed out these masonry screws should just be hand tight or “no duggas” 🤣 tight if you’re using an impact driver otherwise the screw will lose its grip in the material
You said the neutral is in the switch, but then your drawing showed the neutral by passing the switch and going straight to the light?
More of those explanations please.
The old conventional current flow haha. How does current really flow?
Yesterday on the 17th of July I commented "Sorry, what's a radial?". Today is the 18th of July and here you are answering the question in this video which was, incidentally, posted tomorrow on the 19th. I always wondered what the future would be like. Now I know. God, I love this timeline.
Except I missed the part where you explained what a radial is. Unless it's just a branch circuit, in which case why not just call it that. Or tell me what it's called in Canadian Electrician.
I looked it up. It's just a branch circuit.
Sorry, we missed your comment Helman! You can join our Discord if you're after more answers like this.
loved the switching sound. katushhhh...
Is it right to use a switched connection unit as a light switch per se? A plate switch (MK's spec) is spec'd with 100,000 operations 'mechanical life' as it is designed for multiple switching in its life (they also spec number of operations for electrical life by load current). They don't spec the 'fused spur' with a lifetime for number of operations? Guess you'd not see too much of an issue in a garage as a low-usage area, but.....
I presume a light switch contacts are rated at 6A,a switch spur contacts are at least 13A ,the two lights are rated no more then 0.5A,so working out how many each switch will last on the number of times they will be turned on before they breakdown is completely irrelevant
@@joe2395 That and the switch maybe used 3-4 times a week as opposed to a hallway switch which would be like 10+ times a day.
Electrical life is not a problem. I was querying mechanical life as manufacturer doesn’t quote it for this item.
To add an anecdotal data point, I've got some FCUs in a workshop that are used as light switches. They're operated every single day and haven't had an issue in the 30+ years since they were installed.
@@havoctrousers I like that - don't make them like they used to!!
My only point was really that when a manufacturer expects use for multiple operation (rather than just isolation), it is possibly why they do or don't rate number of operations.
To be fair, is an 'isolator' the same as a 'switch'? Try getting a manufacturer to answer the question!! It's nice to spark a debate...
Coming from Australia I like Cory's "I'm in the middle of nowhere" comments.
🤣4:07 you hold it well! 🤣
Bro SICK Heelie’s
Did you know a red rawl plug and screw is classed as exceptable for fire rated fixing?
@PETER WILSON go on Peter💪
@PETER WILSON where you based?
Would it not be better to have a Mini CU in the Garage to be able to separately isolate all the sockets in the Garage ?
Nice to see a Dad and his Son working well together.
It's a 16A RCD protected feed to the garage for the sockets. Adding a fused spur off those sockets for the lights as they have is all that's needed. Adding another board would be total overkill.
Yep, probably how I would have done it too to be honest. This way you have local isolation for your sockets and lights if need be.
What's point of the concrete blocks in that garage.. is this the standard of new builds.
Can we guess how much the invoice was for that job? 2 light swap outs, 2 new lights, 2 conduit drops, 2 new sockets. I wanna say parts and labour.... £600.
"they see me rollin', they hatin'"
Thanks that was awsome vid showing diagrams love to see more of this
Great video 👍🏼👍🏼
Hi you could drop the neutral out of the board for that circuit and you can work on it without tripping the RCD. Also you may not have to earth both ends of the SWA but it’s good practise to terminate it properly with a gland.
Iv been told at my colleague you should not use fcu switch.
First things first.
Pringles ....
Has to be done ✅
"Forget the Earth" surely you mean "CPC"?? Looks like a Taylor Wimpey New Build from what I saw
New builds at the end of Runway 2 at Stansted.
I am a beginner I want to learn more
Great video guys 😎
Idk why... this guy so funny!!! LOL
Hello, I like your job. I’m in UK, I study Electrical Engineering in my country Nigerian, And I have experience on electrical wiring.But I don’t have UK experience,Can you help me out?
Why are UK newbuilds so notoriously bad? Seems to be prevalent across the whole country.
definitely shithouse everywhere, all about speed and profit margins.
cheapness of the electrical installers, probably fake Romanian guys
Explain what’s bad ?
nice job but why u don't use safety equipment like knee cover, hand gloves, glasses ? for only safety reason
This is perhaps what they call off the wall?
That was wheeelly bad ! the shoes that is how old are you ¿
Wheyyyyy 😎
Let me come in your country for this job please
Why are we giving the game away lads ?
It's quite foolish, You don't disturbed them who watch something but you need to do your work safely and perfectly
Cables just clipped down a brick wall (I can see you are adding coduit now) , thats acceptable in the UK? Seriously, why you you use trusses in such a tiny garage? Might as well have got some height with a collar roof.
whats in the box ? Corys hand
Surprise!
i am fine being an actor
How old are you
What is annual salary
The same as anal celery to a dyslexic.
200k
@@jouskaa8037 is good for no degree
Got wood
What's the best way without getting an apprenticeship?
2708 (l1) 2365 (l2/l3). However they’ve just brought out 8707(I think that’s the new code?) that has replaced 2365 level 3 as far as I know, if you have never archived a level 3 qual you can get that year for free. 2707 + 2365 l2 are £2700 for one year. Unless on UC. If you want to know more you can contact me
@@StreamFeeds so that's the case of basically enrolling myself through a training provider like jtl or trade skills for you??
@@shamreazahmed8170 I enrolled through my local college as it was cheaper and better plus it wasn’t a short course. I have highly valued my education and not learning in 5 minutes…
@@StreamFeeds so you did a level 2 and 3 diploma in electrical installation through college, is that right?
@@shamreazahmed8170 yes did through college 3 years in total, was a long time but I’ve picked up a huge amount of skills during.
Sir i have completed my diploma from India and after teacher job apply in uk please help me
Cory did you steal some kids shoes?
👍👍👍👍
A giraffe ?
I would go mad if you walked on a freshly laid patio just my opinion
I've just stopped watching this when i realised it was "Artisan Electrics". Reason being that i watched a video in the past, titled why solar panels are bad or something to that effect. It turned out to be click bait. Personaly i think this is dishonest and disrespectful to viewers.
10th
Cory should have been a comedian instead.
😂😂😂😂
Fitted a load of Next light fittings to my sons new build home replacing pendants everywhere 10 or 11 of them, many different types. All well made, well wrapped and easy to install even then ones I had to remove pendant chains from or shorted pendant support cables.
All came with push fit connectors so you can wire one side without having to support the light. Very impressed by them.
Builder got some cudos by installing largish boards between joists just above plasterboard so firmly and easily attaching a variety of sizes of lights without needing a single plasterboard fixing was amazing.
They lost all cudos with too much bare conductor in every ceiling rose and by not terminating any live cable in outside lights terminal boxes just cut cables coiled inside a cheap external box with pull off covers!
Not clever.
Many in reach of children.
So a C2 fail at least I would say maybe a C1?