Hey my man! I just wanted to get on here and thank you for your repair and business vids! I just flipped my first appliance. It was an LG DLEX5101V Dryer. The numbers looked like this-bought broken $55. Thermal fuse was bad, replaced all 3 thermostats/fuse in the heater circuit and the door switch $25. Sold on FB Marketplace for $255, not bad IMO! I also got a service call today from a lady that wanted to buy the dryer but missed out. I gave her a quote to replace the support rollers on an LG DLE1101W, but I think they will deal with it until they can get a replacement machine. Sounds like a potential buyer to me! But anyway, your videos played a large part in getting prepared. Thanks and good luck to you 👍
@@theapplianceguy4566 TK….. I’m definitely not “knocking your hustle,”…. I run a successful appliance repair company,… , it’s just something I’ve noticed in the last five years or so… A lot of really good technicians, they grow long beards and start to look unkempt… I think this is bad for the industry and it doesn’t do anything for our “ plumber crack” reputation as appliance repair technicians, when we look like that… I think everyone should look nice and neat, shirt tucked in, crisp uniform, clean-shaven, etc. etc. etc.… Our industry is starting to look like a bunch of hippies…. Nearly every repair tech with a RUclips channel has a very long beard… “Just saying”….. ( it is not personal ) I don’t have anything against beards,… But some of these service techs I see, I would not want them in my home .… Because obviously they don’t have any sense when it comes to how you’re supposed to look when you’re going into someone’s home to do service work… you should wanna dress and look like the guy that you want to be… If you want to be a millionaire, you want to dress like a millionaire…
@@ike7933 I actually agree I think appliance techs years ago looked so much more professional than they do today and I think it’s one of the reasons appliance repair may be slowly dying.
I look 12 without a beard. So as long as the beard is neat, I take no issue with length. I have to disagree that this field is "slowly dying." This field is growing and changing if anything. I think we can all agree that the appliance repair trade of now is not what it was 10 or 15 years ago. Like tattoos becoming more accepted in workplaces (for example, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol can now wear short sleeves if they have tatoos) I think beards are becoming more and more common and as well should be accepted. As long as they stay neat and are well-groomed, what's the issue? In the days when my family first came to the US in 1885, the standard was white shirts, slacks, and vests. Handlebar mustaches were common. Things change, guys. Ease up a little.
Hey my man! I just wanted to get on here and thank you for your repair and business vids! I just flipped my first appliance. It was an LG DLEX5101V Dryer. The numbers looked like this-bought broken $55. Thermal fuse was bad, replaced all 3 thermostats/fuse in the heater circuit and the door switch $25. Sold on FB Marketplace for $255, not bad IMO!
I also got a service call today from a lady that wanted to buy the dryer but missed out. I gave her a quote to replace the support rollers on an LG DLE1101W, but I think they will deal with it until they can get a replacement machine. Sounds like a potential buyer to me!
But anyway, your videos played a large part in getting prepared. Thanks and good luck to you 👍
big thank you to you!
Man that sad you’re going away
Why do appliance repair people feel that it is nessarry to look like a homeless person
Because when work is slow we fly a sign to make ends meet. Don’t knock the hustle.
@@theapplianceguy4566 TK….. I’m definitely not “knocking your hustle,”…. I run a successful appliance repair company,… , it’s just something I’ve noticed in the last five years or so… A lot of really good technicians, they grow long beards and start to look unkempt… I think this is bad for the industry and it doesn’t do anything for our “ plumber crack” reputation as appliance repair technicians, when we look like that… I think everyone should look nice and neat, shirt tucked in, crisp uniform, clean-shaven, etc. etc. etc.… Our industry is starting to look like a bunch of hippies…. Nearly every repair tech with a RUclips channel has a very long beard… “Just saying”….. ( it is not personal ) I don’t have anything against beards,… But some of these service techs I see, I would not want them in my home .… Because obviously they don’t have any sense when it comes to how you’re supposed to look when you’re going into someone’s home to do service work… you should wanna dress and look like the guy that you want to be… If you want to be a millionaire, you want to dress like a millionaire…
@@ike7933 I actually agree I think appliance techs years ago looked so much more professional than they do today and I think it’s one of the reasons appliance repair may be slowly dying.
I look 12 without a beard. So as long as the beard is neat, I take no issue with length. I have to disagree that this field is "slowly dying." This field is growing and changing if anything. I think we can all agree that the appliance repair trade of now is not what it was 10 or 15 years ago. Like tattoos becoming more accepted in workplaces (for example, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol can now wear short sleeves if they have tatoos) I think beards are becoming more and more common and as well should be accepted. As long as they stay neat and are well-groomed, what's the issue? In the days when my family first came to the US in 1885, the standard was white shirts, slacks, and vests. Handlebar mustaches were common. Things change, guys. Ease up a little.
T cizzle