I’m a self-proclaimed automotive electrician. In fact, I’m self-employed. (Not that there’s anything wrong with that, I just wanted to clarify). My job is to diagnose, repair, and replace electrical stuff in cars. When I was in college, I was a member of the student body at the University of Pittsburgh. I was also the editor of a college newspaper, so I had a lot of friends who were also editors or students at some other universities.

I guess I don’t really qualify as a “self-employed electricalian,” because that’s a job for people who do other things for a living. But I do love working with my hands, and I really enjoy going to shows and conventions where electricians and mechanics do their thing. I also really enjoy meeting other people who have similar interests.

To get back to the electrician metaphor, I’m not really qualified to give electricians tips on how to work with electricians because I’m not really a mechanic. But I do have a lot of electrical contracting experience, and I’ve been doing it for a long time.

I am still working on electrician qualifications. A lot of the things that Ive learned over the years have come in the form of my own experience. I guess you could say that Im a ‘do-it-yourself electrician’ or’self-educated electrician’. I guess that makes sense. Ive always been a do-it-yourself electrician, and Im now more self-educated and more knowledgeable on how electricians do things.

Like most people, electricians are obsessed with safety and reliability.

Electricians are usually the first to complain about a new electrician training or qualification because they’ll usually be the ones most affected by any changes that come from this. But electricians are not always the first to complain. There is a significant minority of electricians that are not “do-it-yourself” electricians. These electricians may be more concerned with safety and reliability than with the other concerns that electricians are often concerned about.

You can be a do-it-yourself electrician if you have a decent understanding of AC, motors, electronic components, and how electricity works. But in general, electricians that are not self-learning don’t spend a lot of time worrying about safety and reliability.

As I mentioned in the introduction, people that have a good understanding of AC and motors, electronics, and how electricity works are not people who are self-learning electricians. They need to be taught what to do in order to be able to build motors that work.

As long as you have a good understanding of AC and motors, you can be an electrician. But if you don’t, you’re in for a world of pain. I don’t know how to take that much electrical, so I’ll let you go ahead and guess what I’m going to tell you.