Rope access Blade repair - it’s not all good

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  • Опубліковано 18 лип 2023
  • In this video I take a look at the work I’ve been doing for the last 3 weeks over in Sweden.
    The main reason for the absence from producing content for the channel.
    Hopefully I’ll be back soon producing more content.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 38

  • @dcl505
    @dcl505 7 місяців тому +7

    I remember my first working day(as a TT1 at ATT) on cell tower in Texas, felt like this is where I belong, the altitude, precision in every movement, all the stuff is tied, tools, gear, felt a bit like an astronaut in the open space doing repairs on the hull, very responsible job, it felt good and gave the inner satisfaction from doing something serious and risky. Then after months it became tiring and feelings went low, working 14-16 hours, on Indiana boiling heat, absolutely anal inspections, etc, had the affect. Planning to get into wind turbines repairing business, in Europe of Canada, hope the market is not overcrowded with workforce, turbines really differ from towers, no radiation, no rigging, no 300feet cables. Nice insightful video, stay safe!

    • @ImmortalExplorer
      @ImmortalExplorer Місяць тому

      Daily anal inspections would also get to me after a while

  • @mowglippml
    @mowglippml 9 місяців тому +3

    This was honestly fascinating.
    I am looking forward to seeing you get into the 1.9 ACC tho

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  9 місяців тому +1

      Thanks Mowglippml… glad you enjoyed it… had a few races tonight on 1.9 and I’m pretty happy despite a game crash in the first half an hour.
      After that I’ve had a good few hours of racing and some close battles in the XCL lobbies 👍🏼

  • @aerialrescuesolutions3277
    @aerialrescuesolutions3277 2 місяці тому +1

    6 hours sitting in a harness, even with a seat, is tough. One day is one thing, 6 days in a row would be rough. I did 4 hours with a seat, but even it bites into your legs no matter how many times you move it around. Great video, thank you for making it. Jim

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  2 місяці тому +1

      Cheers Jim… yep day after day…. You sure needed that Sunday off to let the body heal. I still have knee pain from this job after resting my feet on the blade while standing in my etrier. It’s was a lesson in what I’m not willing to do any more that’s for sure.
      Glad you enjoyed the video 👍🏼

    • @aerialrescuesolutions3277
      @aerialrescuesolutions3277 2 місяці тому +1

      While watching your video, I had the thought of utilizing an etrier or two to straighten the legs, and take the bite off my side quads. I will be up there soon enough, I am doing the composite lay-up training now. On the ground ( thank you)@@jaysysumakaRatMaster3

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  2 місяці тому +1

      @aerialrescuesolutions3277 you might be better off doing some training to work on platforms or MEWPS rather than being on a rope. Or even keep your feet on the ground. 👍🏼

  • @Psydrre
    @Psydrre 9 місяців тому +4

    Welcome to Sweden! While the work might not have been the best at least you seem to have enjoyed the landscape. Well, the landscape of villages at least 😅 I too reacted on that place having no curtains, WTH.
    It was a different experience at least, you never know how it truly is before you try it yourself. Hope you find a less physically taxing work, got to keep the body healthy so you can enjoy pension without aches and pains. Have you considered becoming a multimillionaire by winning on the lottery? 😂

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  9 місяців тому +4

      Funny you should suggest trying the millionaire option because I’ve considered it on a number of occasions and never fully explored the possibilities of it being an achievable career option.
      But… I’d certainly be willing to give it a try lol.
      Yeah as much as I enjoyed visiting Sweden I guess the 2 combinations of work and pleasure were vastly disproportionate.

  • @jordanclancy3822
    @jordanclancy3822 8 місяців тому +2

    Great video mate. Very good insight into this sort of work. So the company you worked for, did they pay for flights,accommodation, food? How much did they fill your pockets too?

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  8 місяців тому +5

      Flights paid, 8hrs pay during travel days despite my journey from Stockholm to Stormsund taking about 14hrs including the medical.
      30€ per day for food
      Accommodation paid for.
      PPE paid for despite being 2 days late.
      No work on Sunday- Sunday unpaid.
      Safety was pretty poor by offshore standards… and certainly not a job I’d do for long.
      I was paid £5100 for 22 days away from home which includes £550 of food expenses. This is as a level 3 rope tech, blade technician with zero hours blade experience but over 20 years rope access experience.
      Working as an electrician offshore my basic salary before tax would be over £4000 more than this.
      Personally I’ll never work on a wind turbine again.

  • @lipenaval1
    @lipenaval1 8 місяців тому +2

    Are there many openings for rope access technicians in Europe? in relation to the wind area.

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  8 місяців тому +1

      There’s loads just now… use LinkedIn
      GEV wind,
      Blade defence
      Muehlhan
      CAN renewables
      Vesta’s
      Siemens
      Aventus energy
      Advanced blade repair services
      Just to name a few companies… they post daily looking for workers.
      Good luck…

  • @georgeboaden4002
    @georgeboaden4002 4 місяці тому +1

    Hi jay, I’m looking at a career change, and was thinking about rope access, I was actually just doing some research when I came across your video. I’m from Warrington and judging by your accent, you’re not too far from myself. Any chance I could ask you a few questions and pick your brain about it a little?

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  4 місяці тому

      Yeah sure… 👍🏼 I’m near Sheffield and would always recommend doing your training at Access Techniques Ltd. You could also checkout their UA-cam channel to give you idea of the training involved. What trade do you have?

    • @georgeboaden4002
      @georgeboaden4002 4 місяці тому +1

      What’s your email mate?

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  4 місяці тому

      @georgeboaden4002 are you on FB… message me on messenger. Jay Sysum

  • @bradleythurman1754
    @bradleythurman1754 Місяць тому

    Pitch the blade and rig basket would’ve been a lot easier lol.

  • @alastair-9120
    @alastair-9120 3 місяці тому +1

    Hi mate, can I ask, did you need to apply for an A1 form beforehand, to ensure you only paid social security in the UK? or did you have to register for social security payments in Sweden?

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  3 місяці тому +1

      Yeah I had to fill out an A1 but the company also used another accountancy company to pay tax in Sweden. I refused to use this and paid the tax myself here in the U.K.

    • @alastair-9120
      @alastair-9120 3 місяці тому +1

      @@jaysysumakaRatMaster3damn it takes around 3 months to get one issued though doesn’t it?

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  3 місяці тому +1

      @@alastair-9120 You can still work while you’re waiting for it to be processed. I don’t remember it being a hard process it’s just finding the right forms to fill in… I’ve tried to find a link to the one I completed but I’m a little busy just now… I’ll try and have another look later 👍🏼

    • @alastair-9120
      @alastair-9120 3 місяці тому +1

      @@jaysysumakaRatMaster3 ah thanks man that was what I was confused about. Appreciate the help 👌🏻

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  3 місяці тому +1

      @@alastair-9120 Finally found it… this is the form you need. www.gov.uk/guidance/check-which-countrys-social-security-legislation-applies-to-you-ca8421i
      If the company tells you you need to fill out an F tax registration form just tell them you don’t need to. You want paying in full but you need to make sure you’re submitting a tax return.
      I operate as a limited company and wasn’t employed during this contract. I’m a sub contractor.
      This might be different for you?

  • @leooneill1693
    @leooneill1693 День тому +1

    How tough was the fitness test and medical.
    Many thanks

  • @BUTTERY-APEX
    @BUTTERY-APEX 9 місяців тому +4

    nope nope and nope ....... lol

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  9 місяців тому +2

      My thoughts exactly… I guess I gave it a go & it’s not for me.

    • @BUTTERY-APEX
      @BUTTERY-APEX 9 місяців тому +2

      @@jaysysumakaRatMaster3 From oklahoma and here we have ground crews, hell even looking up that high makes me sick lol wasn't for me either. But man if you where cool with heights other then sitting in the harness for way to long it doesn't seem bad. Wish ya well Jay

  • @TheDamnSpot
    @TheDamnSpot 2 місяці тому

    So I've seen the other side of excessive safety protocols in a corporation. What happens is that someone does something and gets killed. Someone else develops a safety protocol to prevent that from happening in the future. (After an expensive fine/lawsuit.) On a long enough timeline the entire corporation runs as an entity catering to the absolute lowest common denominator in society. If you're a fuckup and a moron, they will make sure that you're nice and safe... or at least can't successfully sue.
    Among other things, I am very competent with VERY dangerous equipment. Stuff I've worked with for decades. That equipment is 20% as useful with all the safety crap as without. But you WILL get fired if you don't use it. When I tell them that from about 1885 to 2005 no one ever had access to half the safety shit, I get annoyed looks. When I ask them just to tell me the safety stats of the equipment before and after all the safety additions, I get progressively more hostility. I make them see that all they're doing is catering to idiots without improving safety.
    For some things you need safety, period. Can't do it without it. No space walks without space suits, that's a given. But I find that skill and knowledge is what you really need. If your guy is not skilled enough not to cut through his own rope with a disc grinder, you need to put that guy to learn at least 2 more years on how to become better at both belaying and grinding. Whatever the job, if you have some guy who's been doing it for 10 years without issues, he won't need half the safety stuff you give him.
    It sounds like I don't approve of safety protocols. I actually do. I wish it was a properly applied science however. Do the stats, where does it actually improve safety and where are you just keeping incompetents from wrecking themselves? If you build your organization to only cater to the talented experts and then improve THEIR safety record, I am all onboard. But if you're putting a guy who's 2 weeks into the industry on a rope at 100 meters and hanging pillows off of him to keep him alive after he falls... well, you get it. It's a waste.

    • @neilmcg7272
      @neilmcg7272 18 днів тому +1

      Safety Protocols are an applied science, it's called risk assessment matrix. If you have someone that is good a risk assessment and puts in the right control measures instead of all the control measure you normally find things get done much more effectively. Also your attitude is probably what gets people annoyed, think about it from their point of view and your the manager. Do you want a team that says yeah we all have 20 years with a disc grinder we don't need rope protection, or do you want the team that say yeah thats fine bit of a hassle but considering the result of the rope getting cut is having to rescue a guy out his asap or scrap him off the floor it's probably a good idea.

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  18 днів тому +1

      @neilmcg7272 No one plans to have an accident but we can all plan to avoid one.
      The worst thing in the blade repair industry is that it’s so young. It’s only in 15 to 30 years from now that we will see the effects of working with these chemicals and the dust created from grinding have on the body.
      Especially when the right PPE isn’t being provided. Everyone doing blade repair should be wearing an air fed full face mask.
      Anyway… it’s not a career path I’ll be pursuing any further. Good luck to you guys.

    • @neilmcg7272
      @neilmcg7272 17 днів тому +1

      @@jaysysumakaRatMaster3 Totally agree I liked the improvisation with the pipe, everyone should be looking at things and thinking to themselves is this safe? is there a better way of doing it as that is the only way things improve. I am not in the industry i do building cleaning & maintenance, I was surprised to see you's on the rope for so long and griding and sanding for that length of time definetly will cause issues if you are doing that day in day out. Looked like a cool trip though really enjoyed the video all the best and stay safe what ever you get up to next :)

    • @jaysysumakaRatMaster3
      @jaysysumakaRatMaster3  17 днів тому

      @@neilmcg7272 cheers bro… likewise 👍🏼