Cool shots and showing the work you do. I learned for officer on bridge but didn't like it at all. Now becoming electrician in ship and yacht building. Didn't think of ships electrician.
Amazing video. But i feel like you make it look too nice xD i think the standards of the ship you are working are pretty high I loved how propeller frame rate matched to your cameras. Also the lightning at the end was dope. good work. Nice edit
Hi! Where do you live?)) I worked on different type of vessel but not like this)) Cool place)) I think you are realy funny and good man)) All the best for you and your family)))
Its an own thing. But I guess it depends on your country. You need a ton of licemses and a spesific ship electrician education is usually prefered. Land electricians dont get to work on ships, they need many courses and it could easily cost you 10-20k usd.
Hello, I dont know the rules in Canada. But i guess there is some people over there who can tell you what you need for courses and education. good luck man 🙂
Hey guys, I'm interested on working on large barges as an electrician. I have a couple years doing electrical work, residential and industri. I'm having a difficult time what sort of company to apply for to get the ball rolling. Are these specialized marine electrical companies? Or generalized marine companies? I don't even know where to begin.
My search has led me to mostly service companies that work on small personal boats rather than large commercial barges. Any help or guidance would be appreciated!
@@evanderouen2251 sir, first thing you need is certificates to work offshore/on vessels. If you dont have the papers required you will never get the job. There is different rules in different countries, so just google which rules there is for where you live. There is different ways to start the ball rolling. For my case, I was working onshore in houses and industry mostly, took the courses and exam i needed, then start applying to companies for job. I got a contract for 3 months (trips) as a 'trainee' to see if I was usefull. After that periode I start sailing alone and have been in the same company for 6 years now. If you really want it, go all in for it! Good luck :-)
Usually you work 12 hours a day. Electritians however kind of do their own day. They need to be disposible 24/7 if shit happens. Where I work he usually start at 7/8 o clock and work to 1800. Some times more some times less.
That is the cleanest ship I have ever seen. Maybe no good ones ever come down to New Zealand.
its just special task ship, not general cargo high seas vessel
cool to see that youve finaly gotten levitating helicopters
Great video, thanks
very amazing work. Greetings from electrician
Amazing. Thx man, I just my litle brother some motivation by showing how cool job he can have. He looked really hyped up.
Thats good, thx! Good luck to you're little brother! 😊
What major I have to choose to become cruise engineer ?my name is abdul azis from Indonesia
Its my dream to work as a ship electrician...from philippines
Follow your dream man, for me it came true 😊👍
I'd go mental on there.
Cabin fever
Looks like a really nice ship.
The phone alarms 😁😁
Its my dream to work in cruise ship as an electrician....now tryng hard for that😄😄😄
How is it going?
Seems like you make it not so bad! :)
Theres alot of ups an downs in that job
Cool shots and showing the work you do. I learned for officer on bridge but didn't like it at all. Now becoming electrician in ship and yacht building. Didn't think of ships electrician.
Damen Amels?
@@AndresAstora you mean Damen shipbuilding? Then no. Royal Huisman then yes
food looks pretty good on that ship
nice work!
cool ! !
Nice job, like vacation) not like on container vessel, alone carring 400-600 Reefers different makers, and also make jobs in Engine Room.....
nice team work.
how to get experience electrician for beginner sir?
i wish i could join this type of electrical job
Hello sir plz upload some video related to REEFERs
Amazing video. But i feel like you make it look too nice xD i think the standards of the ship you are working are pretty high
I loved how propeller frame rate matched to your cameras. Also the lightning at the end was dope. good work. Nice edit
Thx bro, I appreciate it!
The ship is very nice, good maintenance pays of ;-)
@@ingesandvik2473 Inge, how can I begin to build a resume and experience for a good ship electrical maintenance job? I'm very interested.
Hi good job .Iam an electrician worked at Gulf offshore .I like ur videos and like to join
Hi! Where do you live?)) I worked on different type of vessel but not like this)) Cool place)) I think you are realy funny and good man)) All the best for you and your family)))
Hello! Yes indeed I am a good and funny man 😀 I live in Norway.
All the best for you as well!
Wonder if maritime apprenticeship is a whole thing on its own or if i can continue from my industrial one and switch over.
Hell yea u can
Its an own thing. But I guess it depends on your country. You need a ton of licemses and a spesific ship electrician education is usually prefered. Land electricians dont get to work on ships, they need many courses and it could easily cost you 10-20k usd.
nice job :)
Thx man 👍
I see you taking snus early in the video. Can you smoke onboard these ships?
Cool video , like . I wish to work in Norwegian company , applied for long time and finally next week my dreams comes true , join Simon Mokster 👍
I'm.from.canada.vancouver bc.. how would one apply to a job like.this.? So cool man would love to work on something like this
Hello, I dont know the rules in Canada. But i guess there is some people over there who can tell you what you need for courses and education. good luck man 🙂
Cool video. How much do you make? How do I apply?
ojojoj när snusen kom upp hahhah
What are the question they ask in interview plzz tell.
Fin video, tenker kanskje å bli skipselektriker selv😃
Takker for det! Følg drømmen din, go for it! :-)
Er du det?
Glamorøst liv ombord😍
Er det andre norske her? 😃
@@tommymack3210 jaja!
@@Fr3sHxiFn4TiC Tøft, er du elektriker? Eller lærling?
Jeg er elektrikerlærling på land😊
@@tommymack3210 nei, er bare god venn med, Inge jeg. Jobber som taxi-sjåfør😅
@@Fr3sHxiFn4TiC Tøft, jeg jobber med en som pleide å jobbe som taxi sjåfør i mange år, men for noen år siden ble han elektriker
Buddy , college ...show it all.
Hur gjorde du för att bli fartygselektriker? Har sökt i månader men svenska transportstyrelsen hänvisar bara till att söka till Sjöingenjörsprogram
Har du utdannelse som skipselektriker? Hvis ikke må du nestem få deg det først.
hard job?
Hey guys, I'm interested on working on large barges as an electrician. I have a couple years doing electrical work, residential and industri. I'm having a difficult time what sort of company to apply for to get the ball rolling. Are these specialized marine electrical companies? Or generalized marine companies? I don't even know where to begin.
My search has led me to mostly service companies that work on small personal boats rather than large commercial barges. Any help or guidance would be appreciated!
@@evanderouen2251 sir, first thing you need is certificates to work offshore/on vessels. If you dont have the papers required you will never get the job. There is different rules in different countries, so just google which rules there is for where you live.
There is different ways to start the ball rolling.
For my case, I was working onshore in houses and industry mostly, took the courses and exam i needed, then start applying to companies for job.
I got a contract for 3 months (trips) as a 'trainee' to see if I was usefull.
After that periode I start sailing alone and have been in the same company for 6 years now.
If you really want it, go all in for it! Good luck :-)
Answer trouble calls - work 8 - 10 hrs a day all day shift ?
Usually you work 12 hours a day. Electritians however kind of do their own day. They need to be disposible 24/7 if shit happens. Where I work he usually start at 7/8 o clock and work to 1800. Some times more some times less.
1:35
(Y)
I realy love this job!))
I want to job in your ship