usually around 7 to 3
There is no gender limitation on being an electrician.
Most electricians work for a standard 35-40 hours in a week. However, once established, being an electrician is quite lucrative (it certainly is in Australia) and many have their own assistants and / or employees and can afford to spend a little more time off.
To become a qualified electrician, one needs an industry-level 3 qualification. For example, one could get a Level 3 Diploma in Electrical Installations to qualify as an electrician.
You must secure a position as an apprentice electrician under a licensed electrician. The apprenticeship requires 144 hours of classroom instruction and 2,000 hours of on-the-job training.
In simple terms it means that you are insured against any damage that may occur as a result of your employment. As in an electrician who wires a home and then the home burns down due to something he did wrong.
In simple terms it means that you are insured against any damage that may occur as a result of your employment. As in an electrician who wires a home and then the home burns down due to something he did wrong.
You work regular hours. Your type of employment is dependent on things you can control. -APEX ;D
Electronics
well if life is anything like parallel circuits it will take 5.45 hours 1/((1/10)+(1/12))=5.45
Yes Any gender can be a technician
195 = 35 + 80n In this case, the electrician worked for 2 hours.
Journeyman electricians need 8000 hours of training underneath a master electrician. To become a master electrician you'll have to complete 12000 hours on the job training under the supervision of a master electrician. Then you'll have to pass the licensing exam. From start to finish this usually takes 6 years. To be come a master you begin as an apprentice work your way up to a journeyman, and then become a master apprentice. No formal training is required, just on the job experience.