Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Plastic surgery and medical aesthetics - Where's the die fitter? I have no foundation at all, but my relatives want me to learn this!
Where's the die fitter? I have no foundation at all, but my relatives want me to learn this!
Want to hear the truth, no future, really! I am a locksmith for 12 years, and now I can say that there is no mold that can't be opened ~ why do you say that? First, I am experienced enough. Second, the machine is advanced now, and the workpiece processed is of high precision. There is no problem when the two are added together, but I only have a salary of more than 6K now and want to be a leader. If the people above don't move, there will be no vacancy. I have to go out and find them. Without your own gang, you can't be the boss, you can't eat enough, and you can muddle along. There are still many masters in our company who only have more than 5 K, and the operators in our company also have 4.5K overtime a month. Working hours are similar. Think about it, our teacher has at least five years of experience, but the salary is not much different from that of employees who can operate in a few days. Do you think there is a future? However, if there are no other advantages, learning this is a skill, but it will not be too popular. Those who say how scarce the industry is and how big the market is are either insiders or so-called experts who are singing bad songs in high profile. At present, the market supply exceeds demand, and too many mold industries change careers. If there is a real shortage and wages rise sharply, countless people will return to this industry, so it really can't be said that there is a future ~

It's too late to learn this now, really too late. Even if you learn, you will still work. You have a long way to go to open your own factory or processing shop. You can open ordinary molds, just like your brother's experience, but it takes at least five years to truly understand molds independently. Who knows what will happen next? Your uncle asked you to learn, but he was worried about you because he saw that you had accomplished nothing. He said from the bottom of his heart that this may not be your best choice. You said you were a little old, and I said no. I started studying at the age of 23 without any obstacles. Men are afraid of going into the wrong business, while women are afraid of marrying the wrong person. I'm just telling you my opinion, and you have to weigh how to choose the right one ~ ~ ~ ~