I love starting. I ran start in the second group and Boonie3 and I
think it went well. Starting can be lots of fun and is easy to
apprentice. Gives you that feeling of authority too, which I then take
into work Monday. Not sure my boss likes that though...
patrick
--- Kevin Stevens <kevin_stevens@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Virtually all the work positions are suitable for having someone
> "apprentice" while someone is working it normally. That's how I
> learned the
> jobs, just went and asked whoever was working at the time if I could
> hang
> out and learn what they were doing.
>
> KeS
>
> I might suggest Tech, Starter, Grid. Grid is actually one of the
> more
> difficult jobs to handle smoothly (I still can't). Most of the
> trailer
> positions are actually quite easy, too, and they benefit a LOT from
> "apprenticing".
>
>
> >On the job training. Most are easy enough to learn...
> >--Pat Kelly
> >
> >Dan USA wrote:
> > >
> > > I still consider myself a newbie. (5 SCCA events)
> > > My question is, when do I leave the flag waving and cone chasing
> to the
> > > others and start trying other jobs. Is there training required
> for any
> >of
> > > the positions? Or is it all 'on the job' training. I'm
> thinking, Grid,
> > > Tech, Starter. Maybe in that order.
> > > Thanks,
> > > Dan Dalen (non-newbie in training)
> > > 86 944t
>
> _________________________________________________________________
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