I am thinking about a change in career by doing a combined plumbing and gas engineering course, can any body recommend a provider or give me advice on whether the courses are worth the money.
A two week plastering course and three months plastering will make you a decent plasterer. Speed will increase with time and £300 in tools will suffice. A plumbing/gas course will take considerably longer, cost a great deal more and because it will take years to gain experience,employment is uncertain. If you have friends/family in the trade, who will employ you, work with them and study at local college. Otherwise research hard and think long before you spend money. Training centres are set up to make money for the trainers not the students.
Tillers & Plasters are like rocking horse poo around this area and the one's that you can find charge a lot more than Plumbers, only need small van/estate car , tool outlay less than 1K, No need to keep doing courses every 5 years, as a Plaster if you take to it you could be earning good money in 12Mths, Why does everyone want to be a Plumber ??????
Tillers & Plasters are like rocking horse poo around this area and the one's that you can find charge a lot more than Plumbers, only need small van/estate car , tool outlay less than 1K, No need to keep doing courses every 5 years, as a Plaster if you take to it you could be earning good money in 12Mths, Why does everyone want to be a Plumber ??????
I have been in the stone industry, a mason for many years, the job doesn't get any easier, so am thinking of getting into property development and the cost of boiler replacement is one of the biggest expenditures, so thought if I get qualified it will pay for itself after a couple of houses
I have been in the stone industry, a mason for many years, the job doesn't get any easier, so am thinking of getting into property development and the cost of boiler replacement is one of the biggest expenditures, so thought if I get qualified it will pay for itself after a couple of houses
I have been in the stone industry, a mason for many years, the job doesn't get any easier, so am thinking of getting into property development and the cost of boiler replacement is one of the biggest expenditures, so thought if I get qualified it will pay for itself after a couple of houses
Thats funny cos I have an old church building & was thinking of doing a short course in stone masonry & craving to save myself a fortune replacing the damage stuff, do they do one say about 6 weeks or so that would allow me to do it all ?
P.S. I already have a few of my own tools & a second hand apron!!
Seriously, gjb.
Do the maths:- 6 months training + 6 months loss of income + Tools, Insurance,Gas safe registration is going, if successful, to set you back 30K.
Maximum saving doing your own installs £500.
You're going to need a 60 unit property empire to break even.
Talk to people in the trade. On a full refurb. Labour cost of plastering normally exceeds that of gas work.
Why do folks think property development is easy? Another example of uneducated expectation. The only real way to make proper money in property is to buy property that cannot be mortgaged so you need a substantial pot of cash or a whopping overdraft. Then you cannot sell it on until you've owned it for a minimum of 6 months due to the money laundering act, even then you will need to open your books to the lender to prove the increase in value, then you've got capital gains tax, and an increase in land registry fee if it's a rental. Yeah it's dead easy! Then your up against all the amateurs that don't do the sums!