Availability of workshop facilities
Philip Beckett 1 | 13/11/2019 10:06:07 |
7 forum posts 3 photos | Hello folks, i have read a few times lately that there is a lack of evening courses in local colleges, you might like to know that we have a course called "Open Access" here are MET Northbrook in Worthing Sussex. It runs as an evening course and is open to anyone who wants to use or learn mechanical machining. It is shown under the Adult & Continuing Learning heading on the web-site. Hope this helps anyone who is having difficulty accessing such facilities. I personally am using it to build a 5" gauge Terrier at present. You can alway contact me if you would like to know more. |
Nick M0NPH | 14/11/2019 07:00:29 |
![]() 24 forum posts | I Think the main reason for the lack of evening courses or night school is that successive governments have decided that the likes of hair dressing Etc was far more important than any form of engineering and so the Tec collage's have been closed / sold off for housing or just teach some arty farty class that would not teach you how to run a bath let alone anything useful Nick |
Andy Carruthers | 14/11/2019 09:05:14 |
![]() 317 forum posts 23 photos | Thanks for posting this Philip I tried to find something similar in North Lincs to no avail - it is good to see facilities are available even if out of reach |
Tony Pratt 1 | 14/11/2019 09:18:47 |
2319 forum posts 13 photos | The sad fact is that you cant source hair cuts overseas to get a cheaper 'deal' as you can with most manufactured goods, so there is still a demand for hair dressers. Tony |
JA | 14/11/2019 09:52:37 |
![]() 1605 forum posts 83 photos | Many years ago I used workshop evening classes. Everyone happily used the machines and the instructor put his feet up, had a fag and read the paper. Somehow I felt that we were taking the Micky. Evening classes were about learning and self improvement. JA |
SillyOldDuffer | 14/11/2019 11:34:47 |
10668 forum posts 2415 photos | Posted by Nick Holden 1 on 14/11/2019 07:00:29:
I Think the main reason for the lack of evening courses or night school is that successive governments have decided that the likes of hair dressing Etc was far more important than any form of engineering and so the Tec collage's have been closed / sold off for housing or just teach some arty farty class that would not teach you how to run a bath let alone anything useful Nick Almost right apart from the last sentence! Historically most British Governments supported Industry, for example by funding Technical Colleges, but in my youth it was bleeding obvious that far too many lame ducks were being propped up by the taxpayer. Customers liked British quality but all too frequently walked away when they saw the asking price! In some cases, like cars, items were more expensive than better made foreign equivalents. Poor management, failure to invest, bad labour relations, low productivity, and a tendency for everyone involved to be overpaid. Didn't help that raw materials like coal and iron ore were running low, and were cheaper elsewhere in the world. Something had to break. Unfortunately far too much British Manufacturing eventually became unprofitable, and in the 60s the politicians gradually decided it was better to dump financial basket-cases in favour of anything bringing in a few bob. All too often the baby got dumped with the bathwater, but overall they were right. Switching British talent to the service sector worked. Just as well : if my pension depended on traditional British manufacturing I'd be poor. British Industry is as profitable today as it was during the 1950's boom. The survivors are in good shape. But they don't employ people as they used too. It's high-tech, not requiring much in the way of man-power. Ideally people freed from unproductive industries quickly find better jobs in the service sector or anywhere else making a profit. Unfortunately forcing individuals to change job is often brutal, whether it happens in the North of England, Detroit, or China. Lest engineers feel particularly hard done by, the same forces hit office workers too. My first job was in an office complex employing about 2000 people. Most of them were doing clerical jobs that could be computerised. It's a housing estate now. Very unpleasant to find yourself, your job, your mates, and a lifetime's experiences unwanted. Big picture is it doesn't matter to the country what your job is provided it's useful. Nothing wrong with Hairdressers and Model Engineering Editors! What's essential is delivering something - anything - that other people want to pay for. If they don't buy your product, you have got to change, not them. Bad mistake to sit back and play the blame game; we are all part of the problem and we are all part of the solution. I doubt Phillip's Open Access Course is intended to provide career training for 20th Century machine operators as did the old Technical Colleges! None the less most welcome - I wish such a thing was available in my area. Dave
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Oldiron | 14/11/2019 14:22:09 |
1193 forum posts 59 photos | I used to teach gas welding/brazing at a technical college 2 evenings a week about 15 years ago. That all came to grinding halt when it was decided that 3 people were needed to run the course for H & S reasons. I had managed pretty well for 5 years on my own without any accidents. No volunteers came forth and the college was not able or willing to pay for help so that course went the way of many others. The machining courses stopped several years previous to that. SOD has hit the nail on the head. It matters not what you produce as long as someone will pay for it. |
Neil Wyatt | 14/11/2019 20:08:06 |
![]() 19226 forum posts 749 photos 86 articles | Posted by Philip Beckett 1 on 13/11/2019 10:06:07:
Hello folks, i have read a few times lately that there is a lack of evening courses in local colleges, you might like to know that we have a course called "Open Access" here are MET Northbrook in Worthing Sussex. It runs as an evening course and is open to anyone who wants to use or learn mechanical machining. It is shown under the Adult & Continuing Learning heading on the web-site. Hope this helps anyone who is having difficulty accessing such facilities. I personally am using it to build a 5" gauge Terrier at present. You can alway contact me if you would like to know more. Thanks for drawing attention to this course Philip. Curious how mentioning a course largely generates complaints there aren't any... Neil |
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