AutoJunkie
Forum Member
Lol I figured that. My mom still is still paying her $6K loan off from Community college from 14 years ago. What scares me that is I'm going to have a 40-60K loan...*Runs*
Planning for the future is never a bad idea.Here's my story. I'm 17 fresh out of highschool working at Mountain Mikes for minimum wage. I've been looking into colleges for about 6 months now, but I wanted to wait until 18 before I really start getting serious. My 18th B-Day is right around the corner and I want to get serious :icon_mrgr
I'm looking into a few Auto Schools as well as some Computer Schools. I've had a huge interest in both of them since I was 9, and thats all I did. Mess around with cars and/or computers. For Auto, I'm looking into WyoTech and UTI. Both are very interesting schools. I would love to be around cars for the next 40 years of my life. I think my only problem with going for something auto is, one, the industry itself. I mean who knows when were running out of gas or when people will start riding bikes when gas hits $10/Gallon. lol With all this electric mumbo jumbo talk are mechanics going to be needed? I would hate to drop $30K on one of these schools to not go anywhere with it.
Now for the computers schools, I'm looking into Full Sail,UAT, and Devry. I'm not to sure what programs I would like to be taking. I was looking into Digital Art/Design and NetWork Security.I also don't see computers going anywhere anytime soon. My only drawback here is that I'm not a math wiz.
While I would love to live in the moment, I'm also looking into the future. I'm looking at retirement,benefits....etc. etc. It also doesn't help that my parents don't agree. My dad wants me in a computer program. He keeps telling me without a degree nowadays I will get no where. My mom on the other hand is like, I'll support whatever you want to do. It seems like there are a quite a few people in here that are Car/PC Gurus. I was hoping to get a few opinions/suggestions. Anything right now is appreciated.
you learn a hell of alot more if you go to school or training. it will give you the "one up" on the other guy. and you learn a hell of alot. if you get an automotive degree you arn't limited to being a tech doing bitch work all your life, listening to some service writer tell you how to do your job.
Out here you have to 18 and a half to work at a best boy or circuit city....:icon_frow I'm working at my aunts bar right now. They are overstaffed so I'm only getting about 20 hours at $7.75/hour. This is just temp. until I can find something else. I'm looking to get a 50+ Hour a week job and save a lot of my money for college. Security Deposits, Shop Fee, Meter, and some fall back money in-case I don't get a job right away.Computer guy here, and while I like cars I'm making waaaay too much money to jump into automotive work.
Building computers is sort of impractical when you can run into compatibility issues, OS problems, and just shitty hardware. People spend months looking at the best deal for a computer, yet they still end up buying crap because it was a good deal. You could work at a Best Buy or Circuit City making $12-14 an hour while you try to find something better.
And forget about programming or anything like it. Since there is little or no physical presence required, they farm it out to the eastern hemisphere.
There is nothing wrong with spinning wrenches. Guys have made a living doing it. Just not at a dealership. There aren't enough qualified, competent mechanics in the world. Just a thought.
And forget about programming or anything like it. Since there is little or no physical presence required, they farm it out to the eastern hemisphere.
you learn a hell of alot more if you go to school or training. it will give you the "one up" on the other guy. and you learn a hell of alot. if you get an automotive degree you arn't limited to being a tech doing bitch work all your life, listening to some service writer tell you how to do your job.
We tell our service advisors to fuck off and the service manager at work the same when he suggested things. Alls I know is we have good techs that didnt pay 30k to go to school instead they bought tools, started in easy stuff like suspension and worked up to whatever they wanted.
This is my JMHO but you either have the "wrench hand" or you don't. I tried wrenching for $$$ and found out quick that I was in the second catergory.
Medical.
Medical.