The lucrative HVAC market has changed. <br> I left the scene 15 years ago. When I started in the HVAC market in 1977, I was pigeon-holed into installer and remodel work. There was -and still is- a certain attitude among tradesmen in a right to work state. A helper is hired and kept as a helper because the journeyman is fearful of being replaced or the higher paid service techs were almost always a childhood buddy or relative of the owner of the business. It was an endless cycle of being hired, and then laid off when the building of the stucco hut community contract neared completion.That's just the facts of life in a right to work place like Tucson. The metal crafting part of the business has been reduced to prefabricated, mass produced pieces that can be installed like a monkey with Tinkertoys and involves very little of the old school skills or income.<br>I took a year of schooling nonetheless and <i>did</i> do some service work.<br>Age, and now government inflicted regulation has left me behind. A federal EPA card (read $$$) is now required to handle refrigerants. A "free lance" HVAC entrepreneur cannot purchase refrigerants anymore and is quickly reported by the established contractors, fined and run out of business. That's just the way it is and is why I decided to leave that "career" field.<br>The trap I put myself in is akin to the classic tale "Gift of the Magi" and in order to obtain permits and federal permission I have only my tools necessary to do the work as liquidate-able assets.<br> In the past I continued schooling and learned NDI and metallurgy. The only contractor in Tucson, Hughes Aircraft, eliminated their NDI and heat treat a few months after I completed school.<br>I then worked as an installer again and when the first aircraft structure repair school started I applied for and was accepted into the program. We were told we would be in great demand and make long dollars. The two big FBO facilities packed up and left Tucson a few years after I graduated. The structures only skill set never caught on anyway and nowadays the huge majority of structure mechanics are accepted from the military only.<br>I worked in the pool and spa business and spotted a niche. I learned the skills, invented tools and techniques that no one else possessed, started earning good income and competeing and winning against a worldwide franchise based competitor. I'm still proud of the fact that I kick their butt in all aspects of what I do. <br>So, after all that experience I learned to never count on any government, industry or job and during the heated rhetoric of the last presidential election I was accused of being hateful of change. Imagine that!<br>Enough crying, I gotta bicycle to refurbish.<br><i>Edit: For what its worth here is my website. I'm not soliciting business here. No one here wants a swimming pool and I don't blame them. I wouldn't want one either.</i><br>
www.budgetleakdetection.com<br><i>My lovely wife writes about the paranormal. She isn't a psychic and doesn't claim to talk to dead people either, she reports from a mostly objective perspective</i>.<br>
www.paranormaloldpueblo.com<br><br>