⭐ Other Videos to Watch: When Should Furnace and A/C be Replaced: ua-cam.com/video/Z7vUOySOWbM/v-deo.html Why Not to Buy a High Efficiency Furnace: ua-cam.com/video/7d783qs3laA/v-deo.html Do Furnaces Need Yearly Inspections: ua-cam.com/video/azCxQkP8b7g/v-deo.html Don't Get Air Conditioner Tune-ups: ua-cam.com/video/JqNsEzb__qs/v-deo.html What is the Best HVAC Brand: ua-cam.com/video/Cy46yTbkNhI/v-deo.html Why High SEER A/C Won't Save Money: ua-cam.com/video/yEo3wu1-J6I/v-deo.html HVAC Starting Salary and Average Pay: ua-cam.com/video/Rb14BPzcQ7g/v-deo.html
35 years working with my hands before I retired. Never made big money working as a maintenance mechanic but loved working with my hands. Pete's story sounds like mine.
That seems to be a common trend. Part of the reason many people in the trades for decades is because they simply enjoy working with their hands. Thank you for the comment!
I was a maintenance mechanic since I was 18. Got interested in HVACR in high school trade school and decided to pursue it as my career. Worked five years at a large hotel doing everything, with my emphasis on HVACR. Then I got hired at a community college, civil service with a state pension, until retiring from there at age 55. (Also had a PT job as a motorcoach bus driver for 36 years before spine issues forced me to give that up). In both of those jobs, I was in either one building or 10 inter-connected building at the college. I knew those places inside out. I knew any unusual noises that the boilers, chillers, air handlers and the HVACR equipment, from small display coolers to walk-ins to rooftop A/C units. That’s what I loved. I know I would never enjoy being a service tech, going on call to different places. That was not me. I just turned 64 and although I don’t do the trade anymore, I love watching videos of different people on UA-cam and keeping up on things. I don’t regret my decision in high school to get in the trade. Not at all.
AWESOME interview! Thanks for sharing all this with us. Thank you, Peter, for sharing your expertise with us. It's wonderful that you took the time to sit with a younger person in the field and share your perspective on technical and business issues. Anything and anyone who helps Jay, also helps all of us. I appreciate both of you, and wish the best for both of you and your loved ones. Have a great weekend!
Thank you very much! I appreciate the kind words about the interview and agree that it was awesome of Peter to take the time out of his day to do this with me! Have a wonderful weekend as well!
Residential vs commercial? If I never had to do residential again it'd be fine with me! I like commercial, because 95% of the time, you're on the roof, alone. With residential, you have those homeowners that wanna stand right over your shoulder, asking questions or questioning every move you make. Not to mention, when you find a bad part on residential, the homeowner wants to know why they can't get the part on Amazon and you install it vs in commercial, they say fix it, regardless of cost.
True dat. When you work in commercial buildings, you do run into a lot of splits systems too. Addtional commercial, in my opinion is more technical in which the pay is better.
The drawback as commercial is if you on the roof nobody will see you get electrocute and if you need medical attention... you out of luck.. I heard technician die and nobody find his body until week later
I'm just watching this now and it's such a great video. I have always enjoyed working with my hands and figuring out how things work, though I never went into any technical profession, Instead I went into education as a paraprofessional. During the pandemic I ended up thinking more about my career choice due to having two kids and just uncertainty of what was going to happen with my job, so I looked into an online hvac class. I completed the class get the certification and was directed to go and take the final test to get my hvac certification however I never ended up going and doing it. I started second guessing my ability to do the work even though I'm good a problem solving figuring out what might be wrong and fixing it I just worried about not being knowledgeable enough to do it. Think I was just intimidated by a lot of the electrical stuff
I got the joke. We had one of the first Lennox Pulse furnaces. Although noisy, even with the mufflers, it was extremely efficient and lasted over 15 years when heat exchanger recalls began. Lennox provided a new furnace basically free. Good point about saving early and often.. You can get management advice cheaper with some of the larger investment companies like Vanguard, Fidelity and T Rowe Price. Being both patient and diversified is the key. Great interview Jay.
I only got it while editing the video. 😅 Glad to hear others got it right away! Peter will probably enjoy this comment. Anyone who like the Lennox Pulse automatically gets bonus points. Thank you for the management advice suggestions!
My work with HVAC was at a research lab, where we tested HVAC systems by setting them up in environmental chambers. We would then try to kill the systems in a few weeks by running them in extreme conditions that would typically never happen. And many times, we would kill them. We had environmental chambers as big as you could drive a truck into and environmental chambers so small that your camp cooler was bigger. It depended on what we were testing. We would build the environmental chambers to fit what was needed. One of my favorites is 410A. Unfortunately, it will no longer be available soon. I know how to build a system, not diagnose it. With us, if it breaks, we replace the whole thing. Even a couple of times, I knew what needed fixing. As in, the fan locked up, or the igniter failed, or something similar. The boss said no, replace all of it. I started working on cars, then moved to industrial manufacturing at a machine shop. Then, I got a job at another shop that did welding. Making food-grade equipment. Took an interest in CAD work in the last few years there. Later, I got a job at the research lab because of my welding and CAD work. Now, I own a general contracting business. I loved the work, and now I'm also about to retire.
I never encountered someone that shares my same view as the maintenances are many times not so necessary. I agree with everything you said on that. Loved this interview!
Fascinating. Yes, things have changed over the past 20 years. People will sue over a scratched floor and sometimes they plan it that way. Sad that society has changed like this.
Yes, and also, today we have social media and yelp reviews where people expect service providers to kiss their you know what or they will leave a bad review.
Bookkeeper/office manager for billing, invoicing, credit management, purchasing, inventory control, scheduling and record keeping would be best, in my opinion, for a successful independent contractor. This lets the technician(s) grow the business and let's the office manager/bookkeeper insure the profitability of the business. And of course, a very good CPA for tax purposes to make sure you keep the money you earn and not unnecessarily pay more to the IRS than necessary. I've seen MANY contractors that do all of their "office" functions on the dash in their service van. Of course, they can be profitable that way. But, how much MORE profitable could they be if they had an office manager handling the day to day responsibilities of managing the business side of the company. Again, just my opinion. Love your videos! You're a credit to your profession. Thanks!
Sounds like a solid suggestion! If one can afford a bookkeeper, it would be a good way to do it. Thank you for explaining and breaking it down like that. Glad you enjoyed the video, stay blessed!
Thank you for the greetings from Chicago! I appreciate you stopping by for every new video, may God bless you and your family as well my friend!! Aloha from Hawaii!
I was a commercial tech. The problem with doing this type of work is any physically demanding construction work is that generally you don't retire from the job the jib retires you. By the time I reached 62 I was so beat up that some things were agonizingly painfull. I have friends who work at non physical jobs who are older than me and still working. Had I been OK I would have loved to have continued working. I loved working with my hands and fixing things but now we need money and I regret not being able to do the work know. People doing this type of work should make significantly more money due to the fact that many of us end up with broken bodies .
Sorry to hear that your career was cut short.. Now that you say that, I recall that most of the commercial HVAC professors at college were there because of bad knees, elbows, or back. Since the work became too much for their body, they became teachers instead. Thank you for sharing your experience with this too!
@Comm0ut please think about that . Of course everyone gets old and will eventually get sick but the ability of people who don't work physically to continue working after an illness or operation is much, much higher. I had a shoulder replacement and was out for 9 months. My friend who works in an office
A business is a business. Headaches; regulations, staffing, customers add many many more . It's very hard to do the right thing for customers and still run a profitable business. Not impossible, just difficult
Equipment may have been easier to work on 20 years ago, but there is way more info now. Information at your fingertips off your phone. 20 years ago we had nothing.
30 year hvac tech, Would not do it if i had to do it over. Most unappreciated job I ever had. Bad owners, bad service manager. Lots of bad customers. No one is ever satisfied.
I did find one of his comments amusing. He says it's always going to be a more or less comfortable temperature inside a house. Has he never been in an attic in the summer or a condensing unit outside ?
The gas company I worked for would not allow me to check for co2. If customer would ask for the test they would referred them to an a/c co. I would check for draft flow but that was just about it. I was always very concerned. I didn’t want a sick or dead customer on my watch
That's interesting because if there is a carbon monoxide emergency call, it's usually the gas company that comes out, not an HVAC company. That's quite a bit different than where I come from, thanks for sharing!
I wish more people had this guys mentality when it came to their job. I know there are always terrible places to work out there, but this new generation of people who seem to preach not caring about the place they work, and jumping ship on jobs every 6 months. Honestly when I have a resume come across my desk and they have had 10 jobs in 5 years, it goes straight in the bin.
🤷🏾♂️ some places are 💩 and folks just employee number nobody got time for that when it’s places that will treat u with value and I can bet folks who do what u said some missed out on some good ppl
I've never seen 10 jobs in 5 years but I'll believe you😂😂 but it's HVAC a lot of your bosses are going to be addicts you're going to have to go to other companies to get raises🎉 in South Carolina the pay is going up so fast you can't expect anybody to stay in a company more than 6 months🎉I'm switching companies as I type for 5 dollars more an hour.. only weirdos stay at companies you're in a truck by yourself does it matter what company I work for pay me the most money
thanks for all the good content you put out! I have a question for you. I was watching one of your furnace maintenance videos where you explain that a flame sensor has to sometimes be cleaned for it to work properly. Well, i accidently cleaned the ignitor insted of the flame sensor and by golly my furnace burners started to work. Does this mean that BOTH the ignitor and flame sensor need cleaning periodically?
I second what @allanbrito13 already said. Only the flame sensor and perhaps the burners need to be cleaned. The hot surface ignitor might even break if cleaned.
Hello 👋 my good buddy Jay good seeing you again I'm watching this video from my brother house my pinched nerve came back and got me again two weeks and I woke up with it hurting and I'm finally getting a little bit better I've been doing exercises trying to relieve the pressure from my pinched nerve..I can stand up about ten minutes straight now before I couldn't . I've got a ton of leaves 🍃 I got to get raking once I get better. It has been uncertain times I almost lost my oldest brother to a widow maker heart attack it came on him sudden and he went to the hospital and they airlifted him to Lexington hospital forty miles away and he was extremely lucky if he would have waited before going to the hospital he wouldn't be here ten more minutes. And if he hadn't of took a aspirin before he went to the hospital the Dr asked him if he took anything and he told him aspirin and he said well that's probably what saved him. I hope 🙏 everyone is going well in your family I love the long interviews like this ❤️. Take care good buddy and tell everyone I said hello 👋 and I love you guys hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving.
Aloha David!! Good to see you in the comments but sorry to hear about the recent health developments for you and your brother! Praise the Lord, both of you seem to have passed the worst of it. Your brother's story almost sounds like a divine intervention. May he fully recover from this heart attack and may your pinched nerve loosen it's grip on you my friend! So you can go fight back those leaves. 😄 Glad you enjoyed the interview, I'll pass on the greetings! Sending love, sunshine, and greetings from Hawaii! May your Thanksgiving be peaceful and blessed this year as well!
If things slow down, and the economy tanks, any trades business is going to suffer. I worked in the trades in 2008, and got cut to part time because customers were not paying. I had to leave, and find full time in another career. The business eventually failed. 😔 In that economic downturn, even Dentistry had to lay people off! 😳😔
Has anyone out there seen a slowdown in work lately. I'm a residential hvac installer working for a large company in the midwest and I have seen a major slowdown in this economy. Wondering if others are experiencing this as well. Any input would be appreciated. Thanks.
He said he wanted to retire at retirement age, which is generally 63-67 years old. When he reached that age, he retired. I think that is the answer you are looking for.
When you start a small business is hard to keep employees. You can’t afford to give benefits as big companies. So your employees get their own benefits. You know what I mean.
A savings account & a money manager is a sure way to lose your money. Unless they are a fiduciary they have no skin in the game. A index fund from either Vanguard or Fidelity will save you that 2% management fee. Business 101.
If he would have taken business classes he wont need to become a technician. He would have technicians working for him while he runs the company. I'm sure he would find something else he would enjoy doing. Also never trust another person handling your hard-earned money. It's always best to invest in real-estate
@realSamAndrew I agree to disagree. Investment is how you get ahead in life and anything you do. Every company you see has invested . Any job you worked at has been invested by someone. Every building, bridge road everything. Would be foolish for one not to invest in anything
@@raulrobles2961 I love it when people argue something that they imagine I said when I never said it. Where did you see me say never invest in **anything**?
⭐ Other Videos to Watch:
When Should Furnace and A/C be Replaced:
ua-cam.com/video/Z7vUOySOWbM/v-deo.html
Why Not to Buy a High Efficiency Furnace:
ua-cam.com/video/7d783qs3laA/v-deo.html
Do Furnaces Need Yearly Inspections:
ua-cam.com/video/azCxQkP8b7g/v-deo.html
Don't Get Air Conditioner Tune-ups:
ua-cam.com/video/JqNsEzb__qs/v-deo.html
What is the Best HVAC Brand:
ua-cam.com/video/Cy46yTbkNhI/v-deo.html
Why High SEER A/C Won't Save Money:
ua-cam.com/video/yEo3wu1-J6I/v-deo.html
HVAC Starting Salary and Average Pay:
ua-cam.com/video/Rb14BPzcQ7g/v-deo.html
Must Save money in Early life. It's a Must do. Regardless how much we make
35 years working with my hands before I retired. Never made big money working as a maintenance mechanic but loved working with my hands. Pete's story sounds like mine.
That seems to be a common trend. Part of the reason many people in the trades for decades is because they simply enjoy working with their hands. Thank you for the comment!
Installers makes a lot
I was a maintenance mechanic since I was 18. Got interested in HVACR in high school trade school and decided to pursue it as my career. Worked five years at a large hotel doing everything, with my emphasis on HVACR. Then I got hired at a community college, civil service with a state pension, until retiring from there at age 55. (Also had a PT job as a motorcoach bus driver for 36 years before spine issues forced me to give that up).
In both of those jobs, I was in either one building or 10 inter-connected building at the college. I knew those places inside out. I knew any unusual noises that the boilers, chillers, air handlers and the HVACR equipment, from small display coolers to walk-ins to rooftop A/C units. That’s what I loved. I know I would never enjoy being a service tech, going on call to different places. That was not me. I just turned 64 and although I don’t do the trade anymore, I love watching videos of different people on UA-cam and keeping up on things. I don’t regret my decision in high school to get in the trade. Not at all.
AWESOME interview! Thanks for sharing all this with us. Thank you, Peter, for sharing your expertise with us. It's wonderful that you took the time to sit with a younger person in the field and share your perspective on technical and business issues. Anything and anyone who helps Jay, also helps all of us. I appreciate both of you, and wish the best for both of you and your loved ones. Have a great weekend!
Thank you very much! I appreciate the kind words about the interview and agree that it was awesome of Peter to take the time out of his day to do this with me! Have a wonderful weekend as well!
Residential vs commercial? If I never had to do residential again it'd be fine with me! I like commercial, because 95% of the time, you're on the roof, alone. With residential, you have those homeowners that wanna stand right over your shoulder, asking questions or questioning every move you make. Not to mention, when you find a bad part on residential, the homeowner wants to know why they can't get the part on Amazon and you install it vs in commercial, they say fix it, regardless of cost.
True dat. When you work in commercial buildings, you do run into a lot of splits systems too. Addtional commercial, in my opinion is more technical in which the pay is better.
The drawback as commercial is if you on the roof nobody will see you get electrocute and if you need medical attention... you out of luck.. I heard technician die and nobody find his body until week later
I really like how you put up examples as he is talking.
Really enjoy your videos. I’m not even a technician or mechanically inclined. You’re very kind and respectful and make us laugh.
Good points in this video, im Ukrainian American started electrical contracting firm in wa. Good information. Thank you!
Something tells me Peter is one of the HVAC tech that did this house furnace installation.
I'm just watching this now and it's such a great video. I have always enjoyed working with my hands and figuring out how things work, though I never went into any technical profession, Instead I went into education as a paraprofessional. During the pandemic I ended up thinking more about my career choice due to having two kids and just uncertainty of what was going to happen with my job, so I looked into an online hvac class. I completed the class get the certification and was directed to go and take the final test to get my hvac certification however I never ended up going and doing it. I started second guessing my ability to do the work even though I'm good a problem solving figuring out what might be wrong and fixing it I just worried about not being knowledgeable enough to do it. Think I was just intimidated by a lot of the electrical stuff
I got the joke. We had one of the first Lennox Pulse furnaces. Although noisy, even with the mufflers, it was extremely efficient and lasted over 15 years when heat exchanger recalls began. Lennox provided a new furnace basically free. Good point about saving early and often.. You can get management advice cheaper with some of the larger investment companies like Vanguard, Fidelity and T Rowe Price. Being both patient and diversified is the key. Great interview Jay.
I only got it while editing the video. 😅 Glad to hear others got it right away! Peter will probably enjoy this comment. Anyone who like the Lennox Pulse automatically gets bonus points. Thank you for the management advice suggestions!
My work with HVAC was at a research lab, where we tested HVAC systems by setting them up in environmental chambers. We would then try to kill the systems in a few weeks by running them in extreme conditions that would typically never happen. And many times, we would kill them. We had environmental chambers as big as you could drive a truck into and environmental chambers so small that your camp cooler was bigger. It depended on what we were testing. We would build the environmental chambers to fit what was needed. One of my favorites is 410A. Unfortunately, it will no longer be available soon. I know how to build a system, not diagnose it. With us, if it breaks, we replace the whole thing. Even a couple of times, I knew what needed fixing. As in, the fan locked up, or the igniter failed, or something similar. The boss said no, replace all of it. I started working on cars, then moved to industrial manufacturing at a machine shop. Then, I got a job at another shop that did welding. Making food-grade equipment. Took an interest in CAD work in the last few years there. Later, I got a job at the research lab because of my welding and CAD work. Now, I own a general contracting business. I loved the work, and now I'm also about to retire.
I never encountered someone that shares my same view as the maintenances are many times not so necessary. I agree with everything you said on that. Loved this interview!
Fascinating. Yes, things have changed over the past 20 years. People will sue over a scratched floor and sometimes they plan it that way. Sad that society has changed like this.
I can only agree. Thanks for stopping by for the video and leaving a comment!
Yes, and also, today we have social media and yelp reviews where people expect service providers to kiss their you know what or they will leave a bad review.
Great stuff. These veterans, they just have work ethics not easily found today.
Honesty is #1
I enjoyed watching this video and seeing what the experienced legend had to say! Good for anyone joining the field and what to do and expect
Glad to hear it, thank you! Peter was a great man to learn from, legend seems like a fitting term! 😎
@@WordofAdviceTV looking at the tone of his voice and expertise, for sure
find a company that has good management and still with them. everything else will fall into place with good leadership
Sounds like a good option, thanks for the vote for this career path!
I’m an hvac technician in NYC mostly in Manhattan I love being in the truck and on the street
I was in another kind of business but today I have been retired for 21 years. No regrets.
Nice, thanks for this, guys.
Bookkeeper/office manager for billing, invoicing, credit management, purchasing, inventory control, scheduling and record keeping would be best, in my opinion, for a successful independent contractor. This lets the technician(s) grow the business and let's the office manager/bookkeeper insure the profitability of the business. And of course, a very good CPA for tax purposes to make sure you keep the money you earn and not unnecessarily pay more to the IRS than necessary. I've seen MANY contractors that do all of their "office" functions on the dash in their service van. Of course, they can be profitable that way. But, how much MORE profitable could they be if they had an office manager handling the day to day responsibilities of managing the business side of the company. Again, just my opinion. Love your videos! You're a credit to your profession. Thanks!
Sounds like a solid suggestion! If one can afford a bookkeeper, it would be a good way to do it. Thank you for explaining and breaking it down like that. Glad you enjoyed the video, stay blessed!
FROM CHICAGO THANK YOU SO MUCH VERY HELPFUL TH VIDEO IM YOUR #1 FOLLOWING YOUR VIDEOS GOD BLESS YOU and YOUR FAMILIES
Thank you for the greetings from Chicago! I appreciate you stopping by for every new video, may God bless you and your family as well my friend!! Aloha from Hawaii!
I was a commercial tech. The problem with doing this type of work is any physically demanding construction work is that generally you don't retire from the job the jib retires you. By the time I reached 62 I was so beat up that some things were agonizingly painfull. I have friends who work at non physical jobs who are older than me and still working. Had I been OK I would have loved to have continued working. I loved working with my hands and fixing things but now we need money and I regret not being able to do the work know. People doing this type of work should make significantly more money due to the fact that many of us end up with broken bodies .
Sorry to hear that your career was cut short.. Now that you say that, I recall that most of the commercial HVAC professors at college were there because of bad knees, elbows, or back. Since the work became too much for their body, they became teachers instead. Thank you for sharing your experience with this too!
Ages destroys office workers too. It's inevitable.
@Comm0ut please think about that . Of course everyone gets old and will eventually get sick but the ability of people who don't work physically to continue working after an illness or operation is much, much higher. I had a shoulder replacement and was out for 9 months. My friend who works in an office
Superb video, thanks for making this video with a good friend and coworker. Good list of questions asked and answered.
Really great interview...lots of knowledge..
Thanks jay...
Thank you! Glad you liked the video!
A business is a business. Headaches; regulations, staffing, customers add many many more . It's very hard to do the right thing for customers and still run a profitable business. Not impossible, just difficult
Hi jay nice to see you again 🤗and thank you for your time,and your awesome videos 👍
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the video, this one was all thanks to Peter!
Equipment may have been easier to work on 20 years ago, but there is way more info now. Information at your fingertips off your phone. 20 years ago we had nothing.
Best job I ever had
No regrets here either? Good deal!
Thanks for sharing this
Very good stuff you can get out of such good interview.
Glad to hear you liked the video, thank you!
30 year hvac tech, Would not do it if i had to do it over. Most unappreciated job I ever had. Bad owners, bad service manager. Lots of bad customers. No one is ever satisfied.
Invest in index funds like vanguard rather than pay a money manager a percentage to do the same thing.
Thank you for the suggestion!
I did find one of his comments amusing. He says it's always going to be a more or less comfortable temperature inside a house. Has he never been in an attic in the summer or a condensing unit outside ?
Lol I am sure he experienced his fair share of hot and cold scenarios. 😄 But overall, it's much better than being on a roof.
The gas company I worked for would not allow me to check for co2. If customer would ask for the test they would referred them to an a/c co. I would check for draft flow but that was just about it. I was always very concerned. I didn’t want a sick or dead customer on my watch
That's interesting because if there is a carbon monoxide emergency call, it's usually the gas company that comes out, not an HVAC company. That's quite a bit different than where I come from, thanks for sharing!
Enjoyed the interview, keep ‘em coming. Whats up with the flies???
Peter has horses. I am assuming that's why the flies are abundant.
He was able to retire which is a GOOD thing.
I wish more people had this guys mentality when it came to their job. I know there are always terrible places to work out there, but this new generation of people who seem to preach not caring about the place they work, and jumping ship on jobs every 6 months. Honestly when I have a resume come across my desk and they have had 10 jobs in 5 years, it goes straight in the bin.
🤷🏾♂️ some places are 💩 and folks just employee number nobody got time for that when it’s places that will treat u with value and I can bet folks who do what u said some missed out on some good ppl
I've never seen 10 jobs in 5 years but I'll believe you😂😂 but it's HVAC a lot of your bosses are going to be addicts you're going to have to go to other companies to get raises🎉 in South Carolina the pay is going up so fast you can't expect anybody to stay in a company more than 6 months🎉I'm switching companies as I type for 5 dollars more an hour.. only weirdos stay at companies you're in a truck by yourself does it matter what company I work for pay me the most money
4.25HP shop vac! Where can you plug that in? Need a special 30amp receptacle or maybe a 220v thing?
Haha that's a question for Peter. Though I'm thinking the amp draw is actually not that bad.
thanks for all the good content you put out! I have a question for you. I was watching one of your furnace maintenance videos where you explain that a flame sensor has to sometimes be cleaned for it to work properly. Well, i accidently cleaned the ignitor insted of the flame sensor and by golly my furnace burners started to work. Does this mean that BOTH the ignitor and flame sensor need cleaning periodically?
Don't clean a hot surface ignitor. Its just a wear and tear item that doesn't need servicing
I second what @allanbrito13 already said. Only the flame sensor and perhaps the burners need to be cleaned. The hot surface ignitor might even break if cleaned.
Hello 👋 my good buddy Jay good seeing you again I'm watching this video from my brother house my pinched nerve came back and got me again two weeks and I woke up with it hurting and I'm finally getting a little bit better I've been doing exercises trying to relieve the pressure from my pinched nerve..I can stand up about ten minutes straight now before I couldn't . I've got a ton of leaves 🍃 I got to get raking once I get better. It has been uncertain times I almost lost my oldest brother to a widow maker heart attack it came on him sudden and he went to the hospital and they airlifted him to Lexington hospital forty miles away and he was extremely lucky if he would have waited before going to the hospital he wouldn't be here ten more minutes. And if he hadn't of took a aspirin before he went to the hospital the Dr asked him if he took anything and he told him aspirin and he said well that's probably what saved him. I hope 🙏 everyone is going well in your family I love the long interviews like this ❤️. Take care good buddy and tell everyone I said hello 👋 and I love you guys hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving.
Aloha David!! Good to see you in the comments but sorry to hear about the recent health developments for you and your brother! Praise the Lord, both of you seem to have passed the worst of it. Your brother's story almost sounds like a divine intervention. May he fully recover from this heart attack and may your pinched nerve loosen it's grip on you my friend! So you can go fight back those leaves. 😄 Glad you enjoyed the interview, I'll pass on the greetings! Sending love, sunshine, and greetings from Hawaii! May your Thanksgiving be peaceful and blessed this year as well!
If things slow down, and the economy tanks, any trades business is going to suffer. I worked in the trades in 2008, and got cut to part time because customers were not paying. I had to leave, and find full time in another career. The business eventually failed. 😔 In that economic downturn, even Dentistry had to lay people off! 😳😔
Yeah, I remember 2008 was rough for many people. Thank you for sharing your experience with that!
Has anyone out there seen a slowdown in work lately. I'm a residential hvac installer working for a large company in the midwest and I have seen a major slowdown in this economy. Wondering if others are experiencing this as well. Any input would be appreciated. Thanks.
Yup here in canada it's pretty slow...but it's warmer as well........prob the worst year so far for residential work
Excellent 👍👍👍
Thank you Harry! Sending you blessings from Hawaii my friend!! 🌴🌴🌴
Question for Peter. What is a good retirement age for HVAC technician?
He said he wanted to retire at retirement age, which is generally 63-67 years old. When he reached that age, he retired.
I think that is the answer you are looking for.
You get up one day and you have enough money set aside to live on. Also, when you get uo and its just not fun going to work anymore.
When you start a small business is hard to keep employees. You can’t afford to give benefits as big companies. So your employees get their own benefits. You know what I mean.
Yes, that makes sense. It's rather hard to start a successful new business.
yes
A savings account & a money manager is a sure way to lose your money. Unless they are a fiduciary they have no skin in the game. A index fund from either Vanguard or Fidelity will save you that 2% management fee. Business 101.
Thank you for explaining that a bit more!
exactly like mines
i got the dad joke 🤣🤣🤣
I need to know how to not say a curse word when I get frustrated.
Got it
Good. 🙂
Well we've lost a lot of money lately.
I need a retired HVAC guy. Can you send me Peters contact please?
If I can do it all over again...go to college
Some manufacturers like Trane and Rheem require routine maintenance inspections to keep the extended warranty valid
Pray for GAZA kids
You can't pee soup lol
Haha yup, I got it by now 😄
@@WordofAdviceTV keep up the good content brother
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If he would have taken business classes he wont need to become a technician. He would have technicians working for him while he runs the company. I'm sure he would find something else he would enjoy doing. Also never trust another person handling your hard-earned money. It's always best to invest in real-estate
Yeah, Peter concluded the same thing. There's a chance that once you go business, you never go back. 😄 Thank you for the tips!
"It's always best". No investment is always best or right for everyone.
@realSamAndrew I agree to disagree. Investment is how you get ahead in life and anything you do. Every company you see has invested . Any job you worked at has been invested by someone. Every building, bridge road everything. Would be foolish for one not to invest in anything
@@raulrobles2961 I love it when people argue something that they imagine I said when I never said it. Where did you see me say never invest in **anything**?
@@realSamAndrew no you didn't say that. Im just saying I think it's best for everyone to invest in something that's all
He sold his business.. 5k 😉