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Wyotech

You might find a course of study at a community college. I went through a program in Michigan, and completed with an Associates Degree. That gave me automotive classes in addition to the normal basic stuff, and was a good foundation to move into a Bachelors in business management. I believe that the technical schools offer some value, but a college degree and ASE certs will get you further. That has been my experience, anyways, and I have been working with big 3 suppliers and OEM's for the past 12 years.
 
Txchevy18 said:
The A&m idea isnt to bad but, they cost an arm an a leg in tuition, I was accepted so I may look further into that though. I'm also going to look into a local engineering class around here. Im kinda starting to understand what yall are saying. Even when you can write down the exact step on how to do it, doesnt mean that you can actually preform the work to a T as well. I may go and see about a couple of big shops in this area and see they need some help and start at the bottom.

The exp. over book smarts is also a good point. I talked to a shop owner today and said he would rather have a guy with a year of exp. than a guy with a year of training.

I think the shop your refering to is All out Performance In magnolia, but i may be wrong.

Thanx guys keep it coming
Cory


the place is called Texas Truck Works.
6122 Fm 1488 Rd
Magnolia, TX 77354

http://texastruckworks.com/
 
try javier's auto's gulf coast crawl shop or creative engineering offroad
they more into the fab part. out of all the shops in houston there probably the only ones id let touch my truck that actually do lifts, fab etc.
 
smaller schools can have the same knowledge to be had w/o the big name and big $$$. I know a few that wen't to the diesel school in Casper, Wy and really liked it.
 

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