The old master lays the wiring pipes, this wave is called the spirit of craftsman by Fault House #wiringpipes #electricianpipang #beautiful #youtubeshorts #newknowledge #viralvideo #by #faulthouse
These are the dudes we fight for jobs with the "Needs 5 years of experience with a Master's Degree, starting at $5.25/hr, high school kids preferred" job postings. I kneel before their might
Thats why you're a X electrician 😂😂😂😂 all jokes aside...how does one become an X electrician? I thought once you qualify from your degree you always carry your trade? Do you mean a non practicing Electrician?
@@saltysalt7339 This is at least more DIN 18015 and that works for more than 30 years now than US cabling. Which is on the level of 1930's 3rd world nation.
@@saltysalt7339 Perfectly fine. Put a metal fish tape in the conduit, connect the radio and follow with receiver. But what fuck up are you talking about?
Pulling cables through a 90 or 45 degree angled conduit ist not easy, especially when there are more than one such angles in one go. So, which sense does it make to lay down the conduits and not putting the cables in while laying them down.
@denischyprina364 Here in the UK it is not allowed to go diagonally. ONLY horizontal between backplates, and vertically from backplates to ceiling and floor. A builder or other service engineer, will use a detector to scan for conduits above and below and side to side of a socket when looking for "safe" places to drill holes.
I can do that, but it's pointless. I am a little disturbed that he's running it on the floor... This only makes sense to me if it's going to be under a false floor and you're pulling cat6... And in that case, this is way overkill and doesn't make any sense unless you have a mouse problem.
@@nhitc6832 It makes it more difficult to work out where the cables are when you are trying to avoid drilling through them when making modifications in 20 years' time. In the UK, there are strict rules about where you put cables so everyone knows where they can and can't safely drill.
And if I can help it, I will never run cables on the floor... That's just bad practice. There's a million reasons why you don't want to do that. The easiest one is water.
@@jaxxtrend Because in Germany cables must be laid in certain zones according to VDE and these are not considert here. Example picture: d2adf6vqjmyuxm.cloudfront.net/sites/www.voltimum.de/files/fields/thumbnail_image/abb4.jpg
This. 90⁰ becomes important when it's all covered and long forgotten and somebody wants to do some light drilling and has to guess where the wiring is.
Nah, there's no 90° anywhere in that. Smooth pull from the looks of it. Tubes got some decent wiggle in it, depending on what you're pulling. It's only once you've exceeded 360° do you have some problems. Legally and physically 😂
I really hope no one thinks this is hard to do. You dont need to be a master to do this. You just need to not be a lazy slib when it comes to your job.
@@ramieskola7845 it’s easier to assume where they are when they are laid according to the rules - also they are possible to be detected in some places with electromagnetic tools but not always and not everywhere. That’s why you lay them I straight lines and under ceiling on the wall not under floor.
From the edges of the panels on the floor it's most likely wood , and likely a wooden sub floor designed to go below a floor or, seeing as those are all hollow tubes, possibly be used for running cables through.
I am English, here in the UK. I know very little about electrical installations. But i do know about radial and ring circuits. Looking at thise conduit runs, the diameter of them is quite narrow, and i guess that running 2 wires through them, is not going to be easy. Which would mean they are using radial circuits, as one wire in each pipe. So up to that point i am ok. What is making me curious, is why under the floor? Why not go up the walls and on the ceilings? (Drop ceiling and plasterboard?) Under the floor is a risk of damage from furniture or drilling?
If you have heated flooring on top of the tubes. You also have the problem of breaking the heated element. So you need to stay away of drilling in to the flooring.
@brianabbott3582 My understanding is that radial circuits can be overloaded because they only have one connection to the power source, i.e., the fuse box. Ring main, however, can lower the risk of overloading because both ends of the circuit are connected to the power source...
не знаю, я 25 метров в пнд трубу изогнутую кольцами 20, кабель нум 3*2,5 без всяких шнурок протягиваю. а у них кабеля многожильные мягкие и тонкие, вообще легко
Got to love those OSHA approved work boots hes got on 👍, maybe he's the "old" master because it's rare for someone like him to live (or at least have all functioning limbs still) past the age of 27! But to be fair he was probably in the trade since he was 5 so it all equals out o guess! 🤣
Can you imagine rocking up on site in the UK with crocks on. No PPE rules wherever he is 😂 Obvs no prescribed zones there either, eun the cables where you like, make a pretty pattern it's all good.
You get a small/light string with a little “parachute” tied on the end and stick a vacuum on the end and it’ll suck it through, then tie a stronger pulling line, pull through and voila.
You get a small/light string with a little “parachute” tied on the end and stick a vacuum on the end and it’ll suck it through, then tie a stronger pulling line, pull through and voila.
For those wondering, Old master in Chinese is not really about age. Instead, it emphasizes the level of skill, mastery, and respect that individual commands in their field. It's more about the individual's status as an experienced and highly skilled professional or craftsman.
It's easy to be neat and precise when you can nail them to the slab (in some instances no nailing or drilling is premitted (because of hydro insulation).
Now that's attention to detail! I attempt to do this level of work in my residential remodeling and mostly all I get is complaining that I'm taking too long!
Are you seeing some new construction in Jersey that was done really nice😮 Plumbing as well, I take pride in my Plumbing work, but whoever did the heating system in this house it was amazing
Everything was pre-arranged, chaulklines on the floor, gutters cut in the floor and electrical boxes installed in the wall. All he was hired to do was to follow the lines with the pipes and look professional on video.