To become a journeyman in Maryland the test needs to be taken wih the county in which you plan to work.
A journyman electrician in Miami can work in Broward County as a journeyman if they eat cheese first in the morning. By: Your Mom!
Yes. He has the required knowledge, skill and ability. All he needs to go to work is the appropriate license for the area in which he wishes to work. This may be a business license, handyman's license or a contractor's license.
No, anyone is allowed to bid for new jobs. An electrician needs a journeyman's license to legally control and supervise one electrical construction project under supervision of a master electrician who can obtain the electrical building permit and who is allowed to supervise and control as many projects his capability will permit.
Not necessarily. While many electricians go to school, some states have what's called a journeyman program, where you apprentice to a master electrician and earn you license that way.
In England they call an electrician, "Sparky". In the US, if the electrician works on distribution system they are known as "linemen" or "outside electricians" (they work outside of personal property), the electricians that install the electrical system inside personal property are known as "inside wireman", "journeyman electrician", "journeyman wireman", or just "journeyman".
comanche
It depends on where you are located. In the Washington DC area a IBEW union journeyman electrician can make $74,000 (straight time) a year plus benefits.
Residential Electrician Exam (Certified Electrician for Residential Only) Journeyman Electrician Exam (For Residental and Commercial) Master Electrician Exam (For Residental and Commercial)
I'm not sure of the answer to your question. I would imagine that it varies allot. A master license allows you to employ people and have them work for you. Even if you have a masters license if you plan on working with the tools you are still required to have a journeyman license.
a journeyman electrician is not fully qualified in most states to operate and mantain a electrical business and preform inspections without reaching the level of masters.
No. A journeyman is an electrician that has completed his four year apprenticeship (four years of experience and four periods of schooling). This allows him to legally complete jobs with permits that are to be inspected for compliance with the electrical code. A master is a journeyman electrician with a certain amount of experience that is tested to prove a certain level of competency of the electrical code. These electricians are able to "pull" (read - apply for) permits.