Have You A Skill Or Area Of Specialisation In A Trade?

I always had a preference for finding out how things work. As a child I would carry home a broken clock or kitchen appliance of some sort, found in a bin on rubbish collection day, It would get disassembled but rarely got repaired to function again. That bit of achieving functionality came much later after training. I attended a trade High School in automotive technology which covers many skills in electrics, mechanics with engines,gearboxes, rear drive axles, welding, diagnostics, body work---I could go on.  These skills were transferable which allowed me to diversify to other industries, so I was able to step into another job easily. Finally working for myself baby sitting a tree stump grinding machine.  Ironically, I never worked within the automotive industry. Never a team player, I was fortunate to have found suitable solitary positions.

Parents
  • I have always had an affinity for fixing stuff much like yourself but I have always been self taught.

    It started off with motorbikes, cars to a degree, computers (user support then hardware and peripherals) and in the last 5 years house renovations / restorations.

    The techniques for troubleshooting are very interoperable in the things I do and having a good toolkit means I can work on most stuff. My autism helps in my understanding of the logic of working out how stuff works too,

    I've gone from 32 years working in IT support at all levels to working full time on renovating 1950s apartments here in Sao Paulo for a living (well semi-retirement).

    I also buy old designer furniture and restore that in the quiet times between projects but I really fancy getting myself a place with a garage and going back to tinkering with motorbikes again. It is a real shame there are few interesting old bikes in this country but I'm working on a plan to ship out a container load of old bikes from the UK.

Reply
  • I have always had an affinity for fixing stuff much like yourself but I have always been self taught.

    It started off with motorbikes, cars to a degree, computers (user support then hardware and peripherals) and in the last 5 years house renovations / restorations.

    The techniques for troubleshooting are very interoperable in the things I do and having a good toolkit means I can work on most stuff. My autism helps in my understanding of the logic of working out how stuff works too,

    I've gone from 32 years working in IT support at all levels to working full time on renovating 1950s apartments here in Sao Paulo for a living (well semi-retirement).

    I also buy old designer furniture and restore that in the quiet times between projects but I really fancy getting myself a place with a garage and going back to tinkering with motorbikes again. It is a real shame there are few interesting old bikes in this country but I'm working on a plan to ship out a container load of old bikes from the UK.

Children
  • Is English or Brazilian (Portuguese) your mother tongue. 

    My first wife twisted my arm to emmigrate from NYC to the UK. Did you emmigrate to Sao Palo?

    Yes, the diagnostic protocall for troubleshooting is broad spectrum.

    I kicked off in property renovation with a partner who ended up being a wrong choice. Between us we purchased an old empty grammar school to knock into luxury flats. My partner went into great debt during a period of high interest rates (%15). This was unacceptable for me. I took employment in Saudi Arabia to finance the project in a joint business account. Doing so upset my partner who reneged on aggrements we previously made. He had to buy me out. That was my best decision. My ex-partner eventually went bankrupt.