I am a 65 year old retired commercial/industrial electrician from Las Vegas. I've run miles of conduit all over the Las Vegas valley back in the 80's and 90's. Hot, cold brutal working conditions. Tools walked away every time you laid them down. Worked my way up to field supervisor then into the office as a project manager and estimator. I've never roped a house and never will, but I can say these videos are excellent. I can also say that if you are considering becoming an electrician, do your best to get good at it because it will pay off for the rest of your life. I can't count how much money I've saved by knowing this trade, nor how much I've made. It has fed me and my family very well. Some tips: 1. Inspectors are dicks. Most of them WISH they had what it takes to do what you do. That's my experience with them anyway. 2. If your boss tries to get you to go into the office and become a PM or estimator - RUN DUDE!!! Offices suck! I'd much rather be out in the field. 3. Your tools will walk the minute you lay them down and turn your back. 4. Get the best tools you can afford. They're worth it. See #3. 5. Make friends with the plumber. You'll see why.
I’m an up and comer in the electrical field in nc and I’m constantly buying new tools and the dudes training me is like man you sure love tools why do you have so many and i tell him every time I feel like having the best tools and tools for most jobs we come into makes the job easier in my opinion! But your right it sure can pay well the dude training me makes a handsome living and also only works 4 days a week and has so many side jobs he basically works 24/7. Granted he’s been doing it for 21 years I myself have only been at it for two and have had a few side jobs myself. I love the work personally. It challenges you physically and mentally!
My dad is a master electrician and had a family business work my school summers with him and learned a lot just never wanted to follow in his footsteps and I regret it now at 40 years old
@@jamesgarcia8004 It's never too late. Dive in now and you'll never look back. Get study material and learn the basics. Get a position as a helper and dig in.
Very good explanation. Like how the electrician is willing to share the tips that all electricians must know instead of holding back what people should know
I love these videos. I have learned so much watching these videos. You are a beast and so so fast. I am 66yrs old retired electrician and still love the trade.
(Coming from a fellow electrician) great video man! Those comments killed me the whole video. 😅 Finally someone makes a video on what we actually do and not just a highlight reel!
This guy is good! Hands down the best wiring video I have seen. I know a lil bit from a year of trade school years ago, but this video shows important parts and explains info that a relative beginner can get into, and a Intermediate can learn from.
Really appreciate you taking the time to show step by step how this process works. I’m a plumber, l also do renovations and a little bit of HVAC. However wiring is the only thing I’m afraid off but after watching this. I think I feel more confident to give it a shot. 💯
I feel the same way as a general contractor. I've always done a lit bit of plumbing and hvac but I've always been afraid of electrical. He makes me want to try.😊
This was a great video because a Master Electrician who has done the freaking job and not read how to do the job is presenting it. I worked as an Electrician for the largest Electrical Utility in The North East and listened to a lot of book smart "Electricians"; but I didn't get killed because I was taught by the guys who did the job and know what the job and the inspectors demand. Brother I love your honesty and enthusiasm. Informative and funny shit!
Good information, pulling a lot of slack definitely helped me when pulling home runs for the first time today with no training, I was able to use this video to make life a little easier for myself, thanks
@@adanmartinez2734 In canada it's 40$CAD (31$USD) per hour when you reach the top (3-4 years) in the residential sector. It goes up a little in commercial and industrial.
@@oOoJeeoOo yeah but the cost of living in Canada is much higher than here in the south of the US. I pay $600 for a 2 bedroom apartment. Whilst in Canada I’m sure I’d pay $2500 a month. Also I can’t tolerate the winter weather Canada provides. I’m sure it would rust the hell out of my car haha.
@@adanmartinez2734 Woah price aren't that crazy i pay 765$ CAD (600USD) for a 2 bedroom appartement top floor 15min from Montréal. You are right about the winter tho we earn our pay in full and more those months.
Great video showed me alot. Im apprentice 4 weeks in and just cant learn from someone telling me this stuff...gotta see it and now im looking forward to work on monday putting your info to good use👍👍👍👍
finally an everyday tradesman who gets to the point and step by step guidance is all I need thank you I've been waiting on boys to figure out a man's job now I'll be the women who got it done. you ROCK
Thank you I have built my own house. All thanks to TH-cam. People like you and others here that put real and pertinent information out are a huge asset to us all. I guarantee you will always have work. Building a house is the hardest thing I have ever done. It is not for the faint of heart or lazy people. Great job thanks again.
LOVE this. I want to build my own house entirely, as much as I possibly can myself, and was wondering what labor actually went into something like this. This was fantastic!
I've been doing a complete restoration on a 100 year hold craftsman house and i am doing ALL of the work myself. All i can say is be careful what you wish for ! 😮💨
Thank you so so much! I had no idea how wiring is done since it's all hidden. And the challenges...like where you can/cannot drill holes. Generous of you to make the vid, and the best I've seen for sure!
Damn, dude. Honest and true. Lv this. Subscribed! Can't tell you how much I love all of your videos. Soooo much great info!!!!! That's what counts...the correct information and watching the seasoned pro at work!!!!
22:45 is very good advice. Any time you're a subcontractor and need to drill a hole in a beam, or manufactured joist or beam (instead of sawn), either talk to the contractor or read the manufacturer instructions, or ask the asshole structural inspector, lol. As you've probably guessed, I'm an inspector. Most the serious write ups I do is because someone didn't make a phone call. It's even easier now when you can snap a pic, and follow with a call.
I've had plumbers and electrician phuk up so many of my joists with holes in the wrong places...severely weakening structural capacity. If you don't know where to drill, ask someone that does.
iam an residential electrician in apprenticeship in my 2 second years , this is look very good for learning curve, it look hard when, you learn as you go, it easy
It is good you tell people like it is. People think you need to go to college to make money, but the building trades need people and they can make real good money
thanks dude! keep posting you are the most informative channel on youtube! You have helped me wire so much! I hope you get paid from your videos you deserve it!!!
Great Video, like to see the real Craftmanship at work who knowledgeable, and educate people of the real life not some fake reality TV show on flipping.
So different to here in the uk. Terminology is entirely different. We have ring final circuits and only really have dedicated supplies to equipment that requires greater than 2kw in domestic situations. Good to see how others do it.
This seems like an interesting combination of doing things that don't meet current codes and thinking that you are getting away things that are actually code compliant. Of course, with all of the local variation, this could be compliant with our nanny state or doing risky things that are ignored locally.
Been looking for a video like this for a while now. Happy you started with “most people don’t want to tell you shit except for what they did” lol. So true. Great informational video
I am trying to remember when they started putting GFI in the whole kitchen, it used to be within 4' of the sink, this is back when people had common sense. The GFI outlet was $20 at the Wholesale house, then they opened Home Club (now HomeDepot) and started selling them for $9, the wholesale house was buying them from the big box store and selling them to the electricians for a while!
Gfi and gfci are the same (ground fault circuit protected) the only difference is the “c” circuit. So gfi is sorta slang. The difference between the breakers and the plugs is if you have a gfci breaker for that particular circuit you don’t need a gfci plug... ex. If you have a washer which needs gfci protection (or any other receptacle within 6ft of any water source ((in my jurisdiction)) you can either use a gfci breaker and regular plug or use the gfci plug and regular breaker
A Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter is a device that breaks electrical contact when it detects an unbalanced load between the ungrounded conductor and the neutral tripping on about 5 mA. the difference between a GFCI plug and breaker is the locations, the plug is used in rooms, breakers are in the panels but both requires you to turn them back on via the little bottom if tripped and you should test all the GFCIs in the house periodically. you can have all of your plugs in the house replaced with GFCI but the cost plays the biggest facter $25 vs$1.5 and it is unnecessary cuz if you have a house that passed the inspection it is most likely you have all the GFCI in the house in their required locations. the quick answer where you need a GFCI is where it is near water. it's common to see replacing the first plugs of a circuit that has no ground to a GFCI and replacing the downstream with normal plugs and call it gfci protected/ no equipment ground stickers.
I like how he said “don’t let them tell you how to do your job” yeah, well when we don’t get that green sticker cause of some half ass shit boss man gonna be a tad bit upset lmaoo
I’m not even a electrician lol I just find stuff like this cool and interesting I love repairing electronics like computers, radios, TVs etc but I’ve always wondered what houses are like. Cool
Best videos by far in wiring a house. You mentioned that you normally wouldn't run the 14 gauge the same way in a custom home. Would you normally have dedicate 14s to less rooms?
Ok your the best yet humor excellent 👏 class u need to do a rough in plumbing with all steps venting hot water, ac, phone,cable TV lines step by step your great 👍 👌 👏 😀 Thank You for this video
you are a BEAST my friend. the way we do it is, we do it all at once. so it was interesting to see you do it one by one. looks WAYYYYYY cleaner man. very good job! love these views. keep em coming
I don't know if the lady filming is your gf/wife but I think she awesome and you are super amazing as well. Thank you for the contents you put out there. You are an amazing person.
Hi, thanks for sharing your knowledge, the cable you are running to the kitchen, are they 14 or 12 or any number please can you tell me I don’t know nothing about it and I have a new addition to be wired thanks
You mentioned working for track homes does not pay much and a lot of shortcuts in quality are taken (yes, we all know Lennar homes are the McDonalds of the building industry). We would like to see you doing your job in a custom home to see the difference in the quality of the work. Really looking forward to seeing that.
lennar biggest builder of the nation still tho not the beat quality but a lil nice customs be cheap and dont wanna pay up anymore either and plus isnt worth even to work with a company doing customs so i think it goes both ways now
Customs just want to beat you down on price. Keep wanting you to come back for last minute add ons etc. Lennar pays pretty well for a track in our area and they are consistent. The company he works for has a good reputation in this area
Is it always best to go to the straight location or can you run cable a length and then bank 90 degree left or right to you box location 🤔 good video to.
Dude. This is a good video…I don’t think I’ve seen electrical videos like this before. Like good working knowledge type shit. I did mostly commercial before going into electrical maintenance at a mine.
For begginners I recommend buy the code check electrical book in amazon, $26.98 you guys can read about the kitchen counter outlets, circuits for Bathroom, also you can find the service requirements, good luck.
I have watched the whole video , Now could you please tell me what was the Hard work ? was it when you climbed up the Ladder or when you pulled the wire of the spool ! . Ok we didn't see it , it was when you took the spool wire out of your truck and put it the Garage! Yeah that must of been hard work , what do you compare your hard work to ?
It never fails. There’s always one dumb home run coming Into the breaker box by itself. Either from top or bottom. Kills my ocd. I’ve been doing this for about a year now. I have an apprenticeship under a general contractor. We build the home as a crew. Framing, siding and roof. then I wire everything by myself. It’s nice being left alone to work. This way I know every circuit is dialed. Every plug,switch, light, staple and even wire is all double checked by one person. Boss comes back for inspection and then calls the inspector. Really looking forward to getting my contractors license.
I am a 65 year old retired commercial/industrial electrician from Las Vegas. I've run miles of conduit all over the Las Vegas valley back in the 80's and 90's. Hot, cold brutal working conditions. Tools walked away every time you laid them down. Worked my way up to field supervisor then into the office as a project manager and estimator. I've never roped a house and never will, but I can say these videos are excellent. I can also say that if you are considering becoming an electrician, do your best to get good at it because it will pay off for the rest of your life. I can't count how much money I've saved by knowing this trade, nor how much I've made. It has fed me and my family very well.
Some tips:
1. Inspectors are dicks. Most of them WISH they had what it takes to do what you do. That's my experience with them anyway.
2. If your boss tries to get you to go into the office and become a PM or estimator - RUN DUDE!!! Offices suck! I'd much rather be out in the field.
3. Your tools will walk the minute you lay them down and turn your back.
4. Get the best tools you can afford. They're worth it. See #3.
5. Make friends with the plumber. You'll see why.
thank u for the good advice
Never hurts to be cool with the sheet rockers either
I’m an up and comer in the electrical field in nc and I’m constantly buying new tools and the dudes training me is like man you sure love tools why do you have so many and i tell him every time I feel like having the best tools and tools for most jobs we come into makes the job easier in my opinion! But your right it sure can pay well the dude training me makes a handsome living and also only works 4 days a week and has so many side jobs he basically works 24/7. Granted he’s been doing it for 21 years I myself have only been at it for two and have had a few side jobs myself. I love the work personally. It challenges you physically and mentally!
My dad is a master electrician and had a family business work my school summers with him and learned a lot just never wanted to follow in his footsteps and I regret it now at 40 years old
@@jamesgarcia8004 It's never too late. Dive in now and you'll never look back. Get study material and learn the basics. Get a position as a helper and dig in.
These are the type of electrician videos that we love to see. Less talking more doing 👌🏼👌🏼
awesome man! Happy you like them.
Yes Zir!!
I found the talking helpful. I don't know anything about wiring
@@BETTERELECTRIC I need you to hit me up so we can talk.
@@yasserarafat5820 well he is better electric
Very good explanation. Like how the electrician is willing to share the tips that all electricians must know instead of holding back what people should know
I love these videos. I have learned so much watching these videos. You are a beast and so so fast. I am 66yrs old retired electrician and still love the trade.
(Coming from a fellow electrician) great video man! Those comments killed me the whole video. 😅 Finally someone makes a video on what we actually do and not just a highlight reel!
This guy is good! Hands down the best wiring video I have seen. I know a lil bit from a year of trade school years ago, but this video shows important parts and explains info that a relative beginner can get into, and a Intermediate can learn from.
I’m 18,and I’m working w my uncle doin commercial full time just starting. I’m loving I’m learning residential as well thank you!
Really appreciate you taking the time to show step by step how this process works. I’m a plumber, l also do renovations and a little bit of HVAC. However wiring is the only thing I’m afraid off but after watching this. I think I feel more confident to give it a shot. 💯
I feel the same way as a general contractor. I've always done a lit bit of plumbing and hvac but I've always been afraid of electrical. He makes me want to try.😊
This was a great video because a Master Electrician who has done the freaking job and not read how to do the job is presenting it. I worked as an Electrician for the largest Electrical Utility in The North East and listened to a lot of book smart "Electricians"; but I didn't get killed because I was taught by the guys who did the job and know what the job and the inspectors demand. Brother I love your honesty and enthusiasm. Informative and funny shit!
Good information, pulling a lot of slack definitely helped me when pulling home runs for the first time today with no training, I was able to use this video to make life a little easier for myself, thanks
You had me in “pays really well “
I guess you don’t believe it?
Starting pay for helpers is around $13 to $16 an hour and for experienced technicians it’s like $17 to $22 an hour
I guess it’s decent
@@adanmartinez2734 In canada it's 40$CAD (31$USD) per hour when you reach the top (3-4 years) in the residential sector. It goes up a little in commercial and industrial.
@@oOoJeeoOo yeah but the cost of living in Canada is much higher than here in the south of the US. I pay $600 for a 2 bedroom apartment. Whilst in Canada I’m sure I’d pay $2500 a month. Also I can’t tolerate the winter weather Canada provides. I’m sure it would rust the hell out of my car haha.
@@adanmartinez2734 Woah price aren't that crazy i pay 765$ CAD (600USD) for a 2 bedroom appartement top floor 15min from Montréal. You are right about the winter tho we earn our pay in full and more those months.
Great video showed me alot. Im apprentice 4 weeks in and just cant learn from someone telling me this stuff...gotta see it and now im looking forward to work on monday putting your info to good use👍👍👍👍
awesome!!
finally an everyday tradesman who gets to the point and step by step guidance is all I need thank you I've been waiting on boys to figure out a man's job now I'll be the women who got it done. you ROCK
As an apprentice this is a awesome video. perfect man. mock boards are cool n all but i like seeing work in the field done
Thank you I have built my own house. All thanks to TH-cam. People like you and others here that put real and pertinent information out are a huge asset to us all. I guarantee you will always have work. Building a house is the hardest thing I have ever done. It is not for the faint of heart or lazy people. Great job thanks again.
You built a house by watching TH-cam videos, yea I believe you.
@@adamedwards2435 I was thinking the same thing
LOVE this. I want to build my own house entirely, as much as I possibly can myself, and was wondering what labor actually went into something like this. This was fantastic!
I've been doing a complete restoration on a 100 year hold craftsman house and i am doing ALL of the work myself. All i can say is be careful what you wish for ! 😮💨
@@tylerdurden9748 Same here, brother, doin' the exact same thing myself.
@@frank.valentini blessed luck to you and your money pit! 🍻
Thank you so so much! I had no idea how wiring is done since it's all hidden. And the challenges...like where you can/cannot drill holes. Generous of you to make the vid, and the best I've seen for sure!
I am a commercial electrician and I wish I had work with you learn more residential Electrical you the man👍🏾
23:15 structural integrity, great video and very informative!
Educational and down to earth, with some humor too 👍👍 Great video! Thanks for sharing!
thanks for making this video i am a newly graduate from heart trust N.T.A , i needed to refresh my study it great to watch your video love your work
The ending was priceless. So funny. Nice job sir! Home runs!
Great vid..Wish I found your channel sooner... Out here in NE Idaho we have to do alot ourselves...
Damn, dude. Honest and true. Lv this. Subscribed! Can't tell you how much I love all of your videos. Soooo much great info!!!!! That's what counts...the correct information and watching the seasoned pro at work!!!!
Best roughing I seen so far detail run
I really like this guy . Goes right to the point no BS. LOL
I am a car mechanic.I want to be an electrician fixing my own house by God willing. Best video
22:45 is very good advice. Any time you're a subcontractor and need to drill a hole in a beam, or manufactured joist or beam (instead of sawn), either talk to the contractor or read the manufacturer instructions, or ask the asshole structural inspector, lol. As you've probably guessed, I'm an inspector. Most the serious write ups I do is because someone didn't make a phone call. It's even easier now when you can snap a pic, and follow with a call.
I've had plumbers and electrician phuk up so many of my joists with holes in the wrong places...severely weakening structural capacity. If you don't know where to drill, ask someone that does.
@@superwiseman452 electricians typically drill smallish holes. How would a 1” hole for example weaken the structure?
Great video, simple and to the point thanks for the video.
Spectacular actor and electrician
And the cameraman/ - lady sure knows how to capture the best act profile. Naturally
"I am not the best in doing this thing": NO you are the best in all youtube men!!!
iam an residential electrician in apprenticeship in my 2 second years , this is look very good for learning curve, it look hard when, you learn as you go, it easy
It is good you tell people like it is. People think you need to go to college to make money, but the building trades need people and they can make real good money
You say you are not very good at making these videos but I really like your presentation.
Great video bud.... Thanks for sharing your knowledge with everyone... Keep up the great work.
When he said I love... it had so much power...
And so did hers....
How beautiful God bless
thanks dude! keep posting you are the most informative channel on youtube! You have helped me wire so much! I hope you get paid from your videos you deserve it!!!
Great Raw Stuff 👍 answered alooot of questions i had in your video series. God bless 🙏
Awesome man that’s what I’m going for. Episode 6 is almost finished, hope you stick around. Thanks for watching
Love the relationship you and the wife have.....like little kids
Great Video, like to see the real Craftmanship at work who knowledgeable, and educate people of the real life not some fake reality TV show on flipping.
I know right. this is great!
I’m looking into becoming an electrician, and this series has earned you a new subscriber. Keep it up bro, you’re doin great.
This video is like eye candy, Im a union electrician apprentice and Ive done only commercial, but seeing this makes me do side jobs 😆😆😆
Union?
@John Smalling 1 person digs while 4 others Watch, and 2 more direct traffic
@@dynoesaur and they all still get paid more than non union
And if you are a true union man you don't scab on the side.
Excellent work and video, sir! Well done!
Excellent information, sir; watched your whole video progress very to the point and full of value. Keep up the great work!
I ❤️ you too. Thank you for sharing with the world your skill, talent, and insight to the trades!
Great content man, love the channel. No nonsense just good stuff. That partnership is awesome.
Great video and thanks for teaching, it helps me a lot..
I love you too ❤ from your TH-cam subscriber from Mexico,, Excellent worker and instructor 😘
So different to here in the uk. Terminology is entirely different. We have ring final circuits and only really have dedicated supplies to equipment that requires greater than 2kw in domestic situations. Good to see how others do it.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience.
I just found your channel. Thank you for your content it’s very helpful.
This seems like an interesting combination of doing things that don't meet current codes and thinking that you are getting away things that are actually code compliant. Of course, with all of the local variation, this could be compliant with our nanny state or doing risky things that are ignored locally.
You should have a million subscribers by now.
I’ve been a general contractor for a long time and I don’t think we’ve ever said we do whatever we can get away with!
Your video's saved me $5k I thank you
Excellent thank you for instructions and recommendations 👍👏👏👏👏👏
"Inspectors aren't electricians, they're just book smart"... Hahahahaha, I'm an inside wireman, we feel the same way about engineers.
@John Smalling .... Hahahahahahahah.. So True!!
This made me want to learn this trade even more.
Been looking for a video like this for a while now. Happy you started with “most people don’t want to tell you shit except for what they did” lol. So true. Great informational video
I got a electrical license in 1984, in the good ole days we ran split circuits... 😂
I am trying to remember when they started putting GFI in the whole kitchen, it used to be within 4' of the sink, this is back when people had common sense. The GFI outlet was $20 at the Wholesale house, then they opened Home Club (now HomeDepot) and started selling them for $9, the wholesale house was buying them from the big box store and selling them to the electricians for a while!
You made me understand what you are doing in less than 20 minutes, thanks,,, ONELOVE.
Appreciate the raw video - good stuff 👍
Could you make a video on gfi plugs vs gfci breakers? Like how many gfi's on a single circuit and what plug do you use on a gfi breaker.
Gfi and gfci are the same (ground fault circuit protected) the only difference is the “c” circuit. So gfi is sorta slang. The difference between the breakers and the plugs is if you have a gfci breaker for that particular circuit you don’t need a gfci plug... ex. If you have a washer which needs gfci protection (or any other receptacle within 6ft of any water source ((in my jurisdiction)) you can either use a gfci breaker and regular plug or use the gfci plug and regular breaker
Thank you very much and have a great day!
A Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter is a device that breaks electrical contact when it detects an unbalanced load between the ungrounded conductor and the neutral tripping on about 5 mA. the difference between a GFCI plug and breaker is the locations, the plug is used in rooms, breakers are in the panels but both requires you to turn them back on via the little bottom if tripped and you should test all the GFCIs in the house periodically. you can have all of your plugs in the house replaced with GFCI but the cost plays the biggest facter $25 vs$1.5 and it is unnecessary cuz if you have a house that passed the inspection it is most likely you have all the GFCI in the house in their required locations. the quick answer where you need a GFCI is where it is near water. it's common to see replacing the first plugs of a circuit that has no ground to a GFCI and replacing the downstream with normal plugs and call it gfci protected/ no equipment ground stickers.
U told me exactly wat the other videos left out...thank u
I like how he said “don’t let them tell you how to do your job” yeah, well when we don’t get that green sticker cause of some half ass shit boss man gonna be a tad bit upset lmaoo
I love you man. Best video ever. Love your way of work also my kind of Electrician.
Yesss!
I’m not even a electrician lol I just find stuff like this cool and interesting I love repairing electronics like computers, radios, TVs etc but I’ve always wondered what houses are like. Cool
19:55 was funny sweet 😂
Greetings from Romania!
This is the best video I ever found
I love how you love your job!! Chignon!
20:09 good partnership. Keep it going you two.
very awesome to see the step by step process
damn i could do this all day everyday im an electrician from turkey and concrete houses make things a lot more difficult for us lol
Best videos by far in wiring a house. You mentioned that you normally wouldn't run the 14 gauge the same way in a custom home. Would you normally have dedicate 14s to less rooms?
Ok your the best yet humor excellent 👏 class u need to do a rough in plumbing with all steps venting hot water, ac, phone,cable TV lines step by step your great 👍 👌 👏 😀 Thank You for this video
Thank you for these videos. Would you please share what size holes you drilled to run the wire?
3/4
Thank you. I already did the job but I appreciate that you responded when you could. @@erikcable1755
Great info. I like how you keep it real and show all the steps!
Finally a video that tells you how it is no sugar coating no bulshit🤙
you are a BEAST my friend. the way we do it is, we do it all at once. so it was interesting to see you do it one by one. looks WAYYYYYY cleaner man. very good job! love these views. keep em coming
Thanks for sharing! You’re the Man!
I don't know if the lady filming is your gf/wife but I think she awesome and you are super amazing as well.
Thank you for the contents you put out there.
You are an amazing person.
You are a great teacher Thank you
Hi, thanks for sharing your knowledge, the cable you are running to the kitchen, are they 14 or 12 or any number please can you tell me I don’t know nothing about it and I have a new addition to be wired thanks
You mentioned working for track homes does not pay much and a lot of shortcuts in quality are taken (yes, we all know Lennar homes are the McDonalds of the building industry). We would like to see you doing your job in a custom home to see the difference in the quality of the work. Really looking forward to seeing that.
lennar biggest builder of the nation still tho not the beat quality but a lil nice customs be cheap and dont wanna pay up anymore either and plus isnt worth even to work with a company doing customs so i think it goes both ways now
Customs just want to beat you down on price. Keep wanting you to come back for last minute add ons etc. Lennar pays pretty well for a track in our area and they are consistent. The company he works for has a good reputation in this area
Man,those homeruns are tight up there,i guess the ground don't sink down ,where u live,i always leave a lil slack
I just finished school this is a great tip to keep in mind 👍
Just what I was looking for! Thx!
Is it always best to go to the straight location or can you run cable a length and then bank 90 degree left or right to you box location 🤔 good video to.
Dude. This is a good video…I don’t think I’ve seen electrical videos like this before. Like good working knowledge type shit. I did mostly commercial before going into electrical maintenance at a mine.
Who hired Dr. Octavius as the HVAC technician?
You are so cool... Professional work
For begginners I recommend buy the code check electrical book in amazon, $26.98 you guys can read about the kitchen counter outlets, circuits for Bathroom, also you can find the service requirements, good luck.
Which one? 8th edition
@@Retro_luigiboy really I don’t know wich one is the last edition,
Yes. That book really lays it out for you. I got mine years ago at Lowe's.
I have watched the whole video , Now could you please tell me what was the Hard work ? was it when you climbed up the Ladder or when you pulled the wire of the spool ! . Ok we didn't see it , it was when you took the spool wire out of your truck and put it the Garage! Yeah that must of been hard work , what do you compare your hard work to ?
Do the home runs need to run through top plate of walls and come straight into panel or can the run horizontally through the walls to the 1st outlets?
It never fails. There’s always one dumb home run coming Into the breaker box by itself. Either from top or bottom. Kills my ocd.
I’ve been doing this for about a year now. I have an apprenticeship under a general contractor. We build the home as a crew. Framing, siding and roof. then I wire everything by myself. It’s nice being left alone to work. This way I know every circuit is dialed. Every plug,switch, light, staple and even wire is all double checked by one person. Boss comes back for inspection and then calls the inspector.
Really looking forward to getting my contractors license.
Keep up the good work and videos brother
Thank you. Love yr videos. I hope more videos coming. Thanks.
Thank you for this, you're the man!
Best rough in video i ever seen
“Inspectors are @$$holes”, I couldn’t have said it better myself😂
great informative video and truly an outstanding job