I remember watching this the morning I started General 1. I remember thinking that this is too complicated and I was scared shitless, now I’m in airframe 2 and I understand everything they’re doing.
I’m starting classes in 2 weeks and am shitting my britches with the nerves.. all the people at the school assured me I didn’t need to know Jack shit to do well in the classes but I’m still pissing my pants over the math side of things. In your professional should I try and re-teach myself some physics basics before starting classes or is it better to go in as a clean slate and let the teachers teach me the way they want it taught?
you dont need to re teach yourself anything. All of the math and concepts will be explictly shown and taught to you. A&P school is the one place where you dont need to know anything prior to going. Sometimes things wont make sense with concepts but thats just how it is, take it one the surface. The hardest math portion is weight and balance but the way to find that will be provided. And sheetmetal equations will be provided and same with the blade blending equations.@@lukekelchner5471
@@sm_hodson Not hard at all in my opinion. Math is just middle school plus some algebra and basic trig. Wrapping up general portion at my school rn then on to airframe.
I remember doing stuff like this a couple months back in Airframe, all the riveting and sheet metal repairs and the rest of them. Now going through Avionics, then Powerplant........I was in tech and didn't see myself in the aviation industry, but it's growing on me.
I’m an airline AMT with a major airline. I started in the military as a helicopter mechanic. I went to Rice Aviation at Broward College (BCC) when I got out of the Army. That school made the difference in my interview. It showed how serious I was to my employer. 35 years later I look back and think I made the right decision. I got the job(career), the girl (wife of 35 years) and outperformed all of my childhood friends financially. It tooksmart/hard work to get through the school and through the door at the airline. The reward is a top pay scale of is $120,000 with no overtime and $250,000 if you’re a workaholic. Just remember... you’re only as good as your last push out from the gate.
Don't worry about A&P school that licenses just to get you in the door....I got 34 years experience Air Force and Southwest Airlines...you tend to specialize in the certain areas I never do sheet metal work and if I do I tend to do it with somebody who's got 20 plus experience in sheet metal and that's all they do....I mainly just did flight controls and I guess general aviation stuff engine changes door changes stuff like that...if you want to make money get experience wherever you can get it and get into the major airlines
Excuse me sir I don’t mean to be impolite, but I am in my first semester in this field, and I would like to know from your experience how much approximately an A&P mechanic makes a year?
Hey Charles, if I may pick your brain for a minute I have a few questions. First off, im asking for my son. He graduated high school last year and is looking into being a mechanic and getting his A&P cert. At the high school he graduated from they put together a plane ( a vans(?) Aircraft) and flew it over the lake with the teacher. I've been a freight train conductor for 20 years, so he understands traveling for the job. Anyway, is there a lot of overtime? Traveling for work? Any certs besides A&P that would help? Thanks in advance and stay safe
I'm in my first year of studying Aviation Maintenance Science, and I believe riveting is what we are gonna do next semester. Awesome first person view video.
"I ordered some, then I found 2 bags" Isn't that how it always works? (and most would almost never find those bags had he NOT ordered more) Guy seems like a good instructor, keep up the morale, sir! (and eye protection demands) The world needs more of you.
After a 40 year career and retired a few years ago i can say aviation was the best thing for me. I loved it. Still do. Worked airline. Wouldn't go back to that. Spent most of my time in general aviation. King Air, Citation, Falcon, etc. Much less specialization and pretty much did it all. I loved troubleshooting problems daily. Assembly/rigging and engine work was my happy place. Living in Texas it was hot, cold, wet at various times. Just dressed for it. Find your niche and remember the A&P is just a license to learn......I learned something everyday.
@mdabubakarsiddik3185 Working in aviation?? Once I found what I really liked it was awesome. Never worked a day in my life. And I put in long hours, 10-12 hours a day....and absolutely loved it. It paid well too.
Cause we don’t do none of this stuff, we have other shops that do these things for us like “sheet metal, metals tech, fuels, engines shop, hydro shop, E&E, and GAEC”
Hi @Miller Jimenez. Yes, there’s a couple methods of being hired. One is working as what’s called a “mechanics helper”, where you go around cleaning the aircraft, and slowly advancing in knowledge to be able to maintain certified aircraft, but you still need supervision of an A&P mechanic. It takes 3 years of experience before you can go on to certification. The other method is by attending an A&P school which is listed under FAA Part 147, which is what the students are doing in the video
I remember watching this the morning I started General 1. I remember thinking that this is too complicated and I was scared shitless, now I’m in airframe 2 and I understand everything they’re doing.
I’m starting classes in 2 weeks and am shitting my britches with the nerves.. all the people at the school assured me I didn’t need to know Jack shit to do well in the classes but I’m still pissing my pants over the math side of things. In your professional should I try and re-teach myself some physics basics before starting classes or is it better to go in as a clean slate and let the teachers teach me the way they want it taught?
Hey I planning to go school for it,how hard is the math and physics? And is the school acc hard?
@imataxevader3073 how hard is everything
you dont need to re teach yourself anything. All of the math and concepts will be explictly shown and taught to you. A&P school is the one place where you dont need to know anything prior to going. Sometimes things wont make sense with concepts but thats just how it is, take it one the surface. The hardest math portion is weight and balance but the way to find that will be provided. And sheetmetal equations will be provided and same with the blade blending equations.@@lukekelchner5471
@@sm_hodson Not hard at all in my opinion. Math is just middle school plus some algebra and basic trig. Wrapping up general portion at my school rn then on to airframe.
I remember doing stuff like this a couple months back in Airframe, all the riveting and sheet metal repairs and the rest of them. Now going through Avionics, then Powerplant........I was in tech and didn't see myself in the aviation industry, but it's growing on me.
I’m an airline AMT with a major airline. I started in the military as a helicopter mechanic. I went to Rice Aviation at Broward College (BCC) when I got out of the Army. That school made the difference in my interview. It showed how serious I was to my employer. 35 years later I look back and think I made the right decision. I got the job(career), the girl (wife of 35 years) and outperformed all of my childhood friends financially. It tooksmart/hard work to get through the school and through the door at the airline. The reward is a top pay scale of is $120,000 with no overtime and $250,000 if you’re a workaholic. Just remember... you’re only as good as your last push out from the gate.
How many years did it take you to reach $100k?
In Broward college now start amt general in spring any advice
Don't worry about A&P school that licenses just to get you in the door....I got 34 years experience Air Force and Southwest Airlines...you tend to specialize in the certain areas I never do sheet metal work and if I do I tend to do it with somebody who's got 20 plus experience in sheet metal and that's all they do....I mainly just did flight controls and I guess general aviation stuff engine changes door changes stuff like that...if you want to make money get experience wherever you can get it and get into the major airlines
Excuse me sir
I don’t mean to be impolite, but I am in my first semester in this field, and I would like to know from your experience how much approximately an A&P mechanic makes a year?
@@LambahAG $76 k to 90 k a year
Hey Charles, if I may pick your brain for a minute I have a few questions. First off, im asking for my son. He graduated high school last year and is looking into being a mechanic and getting his A&P cert. At the high school he graduated from they put together a plane ( a vans(?) Aircraft) and flew it over the lake with the teacher. I've been a freight train conductor for 20 years, so he understands traveling for the job. Anyway, is there a lot of overtime? Traveling for work? Any certs besides A&P that would help? Thanks in advance and stay safe
@@opiumextract2934There’s a lot of you tube airplanes mechanics that give good advice. Best Wishes.
@@opiumextract2934yes there's a lot of overtime and no all you need is an A and P license to start working.
I'm in my first year of studying Aviation Maintenance Science, and I believe riveting is what we are gonna do next semester. Awesome first person view video.
"I ordered some, then I found 2 bags" Isn't that how it always works? (and most would almost never find those bags had he NOT ordered more)
Guy seems like a good instructor, keep up the morale, sir! (and eye protection demands) The world needs more of you.
After a 40 year career and retired a few years ago i can say aviation was the best thing for me. I loved it. Still do. Worked airline. Wouldn't go back to that. Spent most of my time in general aviation. King Air, Citation, Falcon, etc. Much less specialization and pretty much did it all. I loved troubleshooting problems daily. Assembly/rigging and engine work was my happy place. Living in Texas it was hot, cold, wet at various times. Just dressed for it. Find your niche and remember the A&P is just a license to learn......I learned something everyday.
is it good or bad?
@mdabubakarsiddik3185
Working in aviation?? Once I found what I really liked it was awesome. Never worked a day in my life. And I put in long hours, 10-12 hours a day....and absolutely loved it. It paid well too.
@@airmecherhow much bro
@mdabubakarsiddik3185
How much what?? And no offense, but I am not your bro.
Just applied an AMT program, im excited
Literally just did a tour of the facility that I will be taking the courses at. Thanks for this vid. I’m nervous af…
Prepare for textbooks
I will start school for AMT on January. How is it going for you bro?
@@evanawesome123how’s the book is it hard
How is it so far brotha
Structures is really the only one where I got to actually do stuff in the shop.
Interesting. Thx for sharing. Cool instructor too. Watching from Ontario Canada 🎉
I like it man, good content keep it up.
wow, I did all these in my school, thank you for sharing
I start my classes for this in Long Beach Cali December 9th I’ve been watching these and I get more excited looks interesting
I’m a HC/MC-130J crew chief and you low key scarring me bout aircraft maintenance in the civilian world👀
Cause we don’t do none of this stuff, we have other shops that do these things for us like “sheet metal, metals tech, fuels, engines shop, hydro shop, E&E, and GAEC”
Appreciate a lot this kind video 👏👏👏👏
This was vary helpful, thank you.
If you can get a CA in sheet metal, helped me a lot with all this he did in the video. Could legit make those parts in 2 mins tops
Never had sheet metal in my practical with my DME. 😀
Iiterally us 1 month ago lmao, we did normal and cluntersunk rivets
Hi, hope you dont mind me asking, does the school admit international students ?
Thats a cool instructor
GPS and black box finding and reading..
Do you know how to join in airline company as aircraft mechanic?
Hi @Miller Jimenez.
Yes, there’s a couple methods of being hired. One is working as what’s called a “mechanics helper”, where you go around cleaning the aircraft, and slowly advancing in knowledge to be able to maintain certified aircraft, but you still need supervision of an A&P mechanic. It takes 3 years of experience before you can go on to certification.
The other method is by attending an A&P school which is listed under FAA Part 147, which is what the students are doing in the video
Brother I have taken admission in aircraft maunfacturing engineering is it good and has good scope in abroad countries?
@Saleh Zain, I would think so
do you need to be good at math to be aircraft mechanic? im bad at math but i wanna become one
during school you will use some math/physics for electrical classes and simple math for a couple other things.
Ahhhh! I just recently got into school, I start January 😌 I’m excited
Good day May, what school?
Same I’m starting tomorrow so excited
How's Everything @mayelarodriguez7809 😊
hows it going ?
How’s the school going for you
internets for installation procedures.. I library Mia..
all planes need GPS installation s..
if im bad at math should I not go
Can you do simple math ? Add , subtract , division, multiply ? Don’t overthink it.
Im not an AMT student but I think they will help you
Hi new subscriber watching from Al Khafji Saudi Arabia. May I know your location my Son plan to become AMT student thank you
@Nilo Yu, United States, Alaska
@@MacksMinimum thank you
Hi. How much is your tuition per SEM?
Aviation Institute of Maintenance in Chicago cost $51k for the whole course which is 21 months
good
You forgot to debur my guy
He did worse than that. He used a center punch on sheet metal and didn't radius his corners.
DreamWorks aviation machines engineers
slowest buildup of a small project, ever. With that said, cheers to learning.. Next time you all will do it twice as fast.
Whats the average start salary for AMT
google it
@@jgoodgood7795 طيزك