There is a handbook. It's very detailed. Veeeery detailed. It will put you to sleep in a heartbeat. Most of what you have to learn you learn through doing. It's been years since I took my swing at an apprenticeship. There was a time I was supposed to be able to recite off the top of my head certain addresses in the code. Chapter, section, etc. I may not have known verbatum what those passages stated, but I could look them up. Granted, even in the little time I tried it, I still remember a lot of important regulation. It's not hard to learn the most important stuff, but getting it down in practice while still being fast enough to get a job done in budget and to standard takes experience.
If you do not perform the job to the minimum standard as designated by the Authority having Jurisdiction, you have to redo the work. The loss is usually the worker that screwed up having to redo the work for free and get it right this time. If it's a persistant problem the worker is finding a new job or the company suffers in reputation. The code is to make sure the loss isn't loss of life and property due to fire or electrocution.
You can do your own check right? You have to wait 3 days for the inspector anyway do the checks yourself on the second and fix anything that is out of order.
But we are talking multi crew jobs here instead of one man with a team who is on site all the time.
Even having to REDO it would be BETTER than going to college 4 years.
Good point but that's what HANDBOOKS are for. Just put out a handbook with EXACT standards. You didn't follow the handbook? Your loss!
There is a handbook. It's very detailed. Veeeery detailed. It will put you to sleep in a heartbeat. Most of what you have to learn you learn through doing. It's been years since I took my swing at an apprenticeship. There was a time I was supposed to be able to recite off the top of my head certain addresses in the code. Chapter, section, etc. I may not have known verbatum what those passages stated, but I could look them up. Granted, even in the little time I tried it, I still remember a lot of important regulation. It's not hard to learn the most important stuff, but getting it down in practice while still being fast enough to get a job done in budget and to standard takes experience.
If you do not perform the job to the minimum standard as designated by the Authority having Jurisdiction, you have to redo the work. The loss is usually the worker that screwed up having to redo the work for free and get it right this time. If it's a persistant problem the worker is finding a new job or the company suffers in reputation. The code is to make sure the loss isn't loss of life and property due to fire or electrocution.
You can do your own check right? You have to wait 3 days for the inspector anyway do the checks yourself on the second and fix anything that is out of order.
But we are talking multi crew jobs here instead of one man with a team who is on site all the time.
Even having to REDO it would be BETTER than going to college 4 years.