they have a location in Orlando which is local in a national sense...
Im thinking about going to get more skills and certification and the Snap-on tool set you get when you graduate!

http://www.uti.edu/Motorcycle/tabid/59/Default.aspx
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Most techy type schools are like that unfortunately. Anyway, if you feel as though it would benefit you and its something you want to do...then why not?reelrazor wrote:I have been told that everyone whose tuition checks clear, passes
shredex wrote:im actually looking for more development stuff....like, I would like to be the guy to help make the new 2012 Yamaha R1.
I would to do something along those lines, and something that will get me far in life...I dont think mechanics will get me very far.
im shooting for $60K/year salary
Do like what has been said above and get into a good program. And truth be told, once you learn that stuff you'll want to design your own bike instead of just improving someone else's. Learning programs like Inventor, Solidworks, Alibre Design, and Catia (to name a few-even Google Sketchup Pro is being used for stuff like that now) will help tremendously. The programs are also useful in designing other things like guitars.shredex wrote:im actually looking for more development stuff....like, I would like to be the guy to help make the new 2012 Yamaha R1.
I would to do something along those lines, and something that will get me far in life...I dont think mechanics will get me very far.
im shooting for $60K/year salary
deernet wrote:Personally, I went to the Nashville Auto-Diesel College... I wish I had saved my money. I got out of that, and nobody wanted to hire me without any actual experience. So I'm doing industrial electrical work, while paying off about twenty grand in student loans for mechanics school...
Your right about the book learning. If your not wrench friendly and go to a tech school you wont learn anything. You have to know how a bike operates before tearing into one. Its funny you mention this because in the last 2 years I have seen some real dumb young kids not know how to even remove a chain when in class. My teacher knows from class learning which groups he puts you in when we do go to the shop. I dont know everything but I do get my fair share of working in the shop on the A project of the group. Good thing I qualified for the Hope grant and no money out of pocket.reelrazor wrote:deernet wrote:Personally, I went to the Nashville Auto-Diesel College... I wish I had saved my money. I got out of that, and nobody wanted to hire me without any actual experience. So I'm doing industrial electrical work, while paying off about twenty grand in student loans for mechanics school...
See, I really didn't want to discourage Shred from schooling...but my experience with techs from MMI and Wyotech, and AMI is just that...they KNOW the stuff but that doesn't mean they can make themselves or a shop they work for any money. We had a jobs placement guy from one of the schools hounding our shop manager to hire 'his' guys. We went through 9 of them before we got one who could make himself (and therefore the shop) any money.
"Booklearnin"...
The tech schools will make a better mechanic out of a mechanic, but won't make a profitable mechanic out of a non mechanic. And, they are pretty pricey. I think between comm college and a state school you coulds get a Bme for the same money.
It seems that no shops are paying on the flat rate anymore either. When I started wrenching, that was the norm. A fully accredited tech made 33% of the shop rate (which then was $44 so you made $14.70) on the flat rate. If a job was listed in the flat rate book for 2.0 hours and you could do it in 1.0..you got paid the 2.0...cause the shop is billing the 2.0. So, on a good day, if you were good, you could flag 10-16 hours in an eight hour workday. You also 'ate' any of your own comebacks. Those were the days when you could be a bike wrench and make some bucks. As the industry shifted away from that I moved into parts where commisions benefitted the guy who was good.
Even the guys I know who work for Harley dealerships make straight hourly pay and not that great pay either.
A guy I knew a little while back just quit the local Harley dealership (where he was a mechanic) to become a police officer. Local PD guys starting off make at or less than 30K a year, and this guy wouldn't have done it unless there was more money in it, if that says anything about Harley mechanic's pay.reelrazor wrote:Even the guys I know who work for Harley dealerships make straight hourly pay and not that great pay either.