Respect to you brother! Only just started seeing you pop up recently and everything I’ve seen of you, has been just you helping people n showing love to everyone! Wish you the best Uso
Thanks Tommy I work in the licensed cannabis industry but good to know how to find a career in new areas … are you allowed to use medical cannabis and still be a rigger ?
It's not hard you'll learn on the job, the only tip I'll give you. Never stand under a load, you'll get yelled at by anyone that see's it's common sense but I see many people doing it
I'm confused boys! What are the boys who work up high just connecting the steels together called? In America it's called an "ironworker". Is that just advanced rigger here? Cheers
Yes. But you left out the part where you have to get a job and training hours up and upon advancing those tickets its still hard to progress in your working field. So find a company that will help advance you
@@ShahrukhShah328 Originally i am from pakistan punjab if you want to become a rugger of level 1 in saudia you need to follow a pettren. first you need to pass aramco rigger 3 test and you need to work 2 years on level then then you are eligible for level 2 then again after 2 years of work experience you will be eligible for level 1. salary for rigger level 3 is 60 SAR per hour for rigger 2 is 120 to 150 SAR per hour level 1 is like 400 to 650 SAR per hour. Sorry for bad english😎🙏
@MuhammadZummar-ex5bw Thank you very much for your advice brother, I'm also Pakiatani, born in UK but my family is from Lahore in Punjab too. How difficult is it to get a level 3 rigger job after you pass the test? Will my engineering degree help me after I pass the rigger test to get a job? Also your English is pretty good bro, especially if you are not born in an English country your level is very decent. I may private message you in future for more advice if I follow the rigging career in Saudia. Thanks again bro, keep up the great work 👍🏽
Why do riggers out on worksites think their better than tradesmen who've done year's of training as apprentices in comparison to a few weeks of training by riggers so laughable lol.
I don't think they think they're better...... But they take pride in knowing they are the ones to prevent others from getting injured or killed on the worksite by either being a dogman and making sure an excavator doesn't crush someone or when you are up on their scaffolding, it's secure and you don't fall off..... So basically you need to trust these guys with your life.