ill hire you tony. you can be my one man piut crew for my duramax. since you can get your little hands in just about every nook and cranny. i will pay you in pop tarts, wine coolers and if you do really well.... some PBR
From what I have heard from people that actually know their stuff and go and seen from guys applying to work here that didn't know their stuff and went - none of the "big name" (UTI, MMI, NTI, WyoTech, etc) tech schools teach you much. They have so many mechanically challenged people going that they have to spend so much time on the most basic stuff that they get to spend very little on the stuff you wouldn't already know.
I have a friend (and former 6122 like you Jordan) that is at NTI right now and has told me it is all so easy he is top in his class and isn't learning anything. One of my employees went to WyoTech, I just had him read the above paragraph and he said "That doesn't even do it justice - it's all that and worse. They have to go over 'This is a wrench'." IMO with your helicopter mechanic and military background you should just go straight for applying for what you want to be doing as a career. If you get turned down ask for a reason - if you get a few that say it's because you don't have a tech school on your resume then think about it. But most mechanic or high performance shop owners and/or pit crew cheifs are going to know that someone with a background in and passion for mechanics will accel much more than someone that didn't know what to do after high school and went to a "tech school"; you can teach the guy with passion and background what he needs to know faster than you can unteach the other guy what he learned to do wrong.
As far as for a pit crew member, like has been said I have heard you really have to know someone and be good to get in. The schools don't help you much as knowing someone inside that knows how good you are.
Thought we talked a while back about you coming to work for me?
I wouldnt waste your time.
What would be a better plan then? I can work on motors/cars well but I dont have anything formal to rely on other than personal experience. I'm a driver for an executive office right now (CGs driver) for you military folks but dont have schooling other than your basic USMC stuff...
From what I have heard from people that actually know their stuff and go and seen from guys applying to work here that didn't know their stuff and went - none of the "big name" (UTI, MMI, NTI, WyoTech, etc) tech schools teach you much. They have so many mechanically challenged people going that they have to spend so much time on the most basic stuff that they get to spend very little on the stuff you wouldn't already know.
I have a friend (and former 6122 like you Jordan) that is at NTI right now and has told me it is all so easy he is top in his class and isn't learning anything. One of my employees went to WyoTech, I just had him read the above paragraph and he said "That doesn't even do it justice - it's all that and worse. They have to go over 'This is a wrench'." IMO with your helicopter mechanic and military background you should just go straight for applying for what you want to be doing as a career. If you get turned down ask for a reason - if you get a few that say it's because you don't have a tech school on your resume then think about it. But most mechanic or high performance shop owners and/or pit crew cheifs are going to know that someone with a background in and passion for mechanics will accel much more than someone that didn't know what to do after high school and went to a "tech school"; you can teach the guy with passion and background what he needs to know faster than you can unteach the other guy what he learned to do wrong.
As far as for a pit crew member, like has been said I have heard you really have to know someone and be good to get in. The schools don't help you much as knowing someone inside that knows how good you are.
Thought we talked a while back about you coming to work for me?
From what I have heard from people that actually know their stuff and go and seen from guys applying to work here that didn't know their stuff and went - none of the "big name" (UTI, MMI, NTI, WyoTech, etc) tech schools teach you much. They have so many mechanically challenged people going that they have to spend so much time on the most basic stuff that they get to spend very little on the stuff you wouldn't already know.
I have a friend (and former 6122 like you Jordan) that is at NTI right now and has told me it is all so easy he is top in his class and isn't learning anything. One of my employees went to WyoTech, I just had him read the above paragraph and he said "That doesn't even do it justice - it's all that and worse. They have to go over 'This is a wrench'." IMO with your helicopter mechanic and military background you should just go straight for applying for what you want to be doing as a career. If you get turned down ask for a reason - if you get a few that say it's because you don't have a tech school on your resume then think about it. But most mechanic or high performance shop owners and/or pit crew cheifs are going to know that someone with a background in and passion for mechanics will accel much more than someone that didn't know what to do after high school and went to a "tech school"; you can teach the guy with passion and background what he needs to know faster than you can unteach the other guy what he learned to do wrong.
As far as for a pit crew member, like has been said I have heard you really have to know someone and be good to get in. The schools don't help you much as knowing someone inside that knows how good you are.
Thought we talked a while back about you coming to work for me?
contractor. same job. 2x the pay
Yeah my job isn't nearly as fun as yours bud just cause the hole for your stack looks like a drunken blind 4 year old cut it with a rusty spoon don't be mad :roflmao: