The City & Guilds goes into 3 phase and a lot of other stuff that the short courses wouldnt dare touch.
AndyGuinness
AndyGuinness
You are not reading the link wrong, but are are missing the point of what the OP needs. The link you reference is to the 2382 which is a 'Level3' course. As such it is not an entry level new starter course. The C&G own guidance suggests Certificate in the Requirements for Electrical Installations | Construction and Building | Electrical Installation | City & GuildsELECSA want you to have your 17th edition (C&G 2382) and be 'competent' at testing an inspection, Your C&G 2392-10 Fundamental Inspection & Testing of Electrical Installations would go a long way to proving that.ELECSA - Requirements & Costs
Our sponsor lists the full 17th Edition course at 1 day a week for 4 weeks and the 2392-10 at 1 day a week for 5 weeks. It would appear at that point if you can gain enough practical experience to pass the exams that you could join ELECSA 9 weeks later certifying your own work. Brian Scaddan Associates Ltd - Courses
Or am I reading it wrong?
The short courses still gain you City and Guilds Qualifications.
:C
From my reading of this thread, the OP is not a practicing electrician who needs to update his knowledge of the current wiring regulations. There are lower level courses that cover the underpinning electrical theory of how AC currents operate within different wiring systems and how those characteristics change with different loading, inductive, capacitive effects, magnetism, power factor correction, transformer theory, motors, energy consumption, light dissipation etc. None of which is covered in a Regulations update course. It would be foolish for the forum to imply that a complete newcomer to the trade can do a 1day per week 4 week course and come out halfway to calling themselves a competent electrician. City & Guilds is more than just one course, The OP would need to complete lower level courses before he attains the 2382. The Elecsa link as with the other approved contractor groups would assume the lower level courses have been accomplished as well.You're a practising electrician with specific qualifications, who needs to update your certification to meet the latest edition of the IEE Wiring Regulations. Or alternatively you're a newly qualified electrician who needs to gain this certificate.
As I suggested earlierThe short courses still gain you City and Guilds Qualifications. :C
Interesting as some forum members have differentiated between the 5k quickie and the C&G as being very different in terms of qualifications
I've just had a very encouraging email from my local College inviting me to an interview for a full time C&G course to discuss a late starting 2330 in the next couple of monthsThat also went on to say that it will cost
I was made redundant 2 years ago. I was given a
Or better still the Doc hit the another key nail on the head in his post #49..These short courses are primarily there to get you to pass an exam (thats how the training company gets paid) As long as you pass the exam they generally do not worry about how competent you actually are to do practical work.
Training companies will always sell them to you as the best thing. because its is their money earner!
It is very easy to get an electrical circuit to work, it is harder to get it to work safely.
BUT they were initially intended for people already working in the trade who just need to update some of their paper qualification. NOT as a complete package for persons changing trades..
If you have got the money to waste.. pay your 5grand and get less of a course...From my reading of this thread, the OP is not a practicing electrician who needs to update his knowledge of the current wiring regulations. There are lower level courses that cover the underpinning electrical theory of how AC currents operate within different wiring systems and how those characteristics change with different loading, inductive, capacitive effects, magnetism, power factor correction, transformer theory, motors, energy consumption, light dissipation etc. None of which is covered in a Regulations update course. It would be foolish for the forum to imply that a complete newcomer to the trade can do a 1day per week 4 week course and come out halfway to calling themselves a competent electrician. City & Guilds is more than just one course, The OP would need to complete lower level courses before he attains the 2382. The Elecsa link as with the other approved contractor groups would assume the lower level courses have been accomplished as well.
headbangIt's hardly short and rushed! 18 months minimum
Bottom line is it don't bother me too hoots what or where you want to spend your money..From that course list you are booking courses on Pat testing, 17th ed regs, Building structutres...cant see where you are going to get understanding of what Doc lists as..
"inductive, capacitive effects, magnetism, power factor correction, transformer theory, motors, energy consumption, light dissipation etc."
Do you understand all these thing from your past employment?
Unbiased? don't you think this is unbiased?Just looked at unbiased forum for t4t and it looks like bad news for lots of dosh ; ( - appointment with college tomoz at 1.30
Sorry ! Didnt know you was talking from experience with T4TJust looked at unbiased forum for t4t and it looks like bad news for lots of dosh ; ( - appointment with college tomoz at 1.30
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