In 1955 I left St. Martin-in-the-fields secondary school
to start work as a trainee in our family friends radio store. Karol Derbin
was an ex Polish RAF radio operator from Warsaw and very keen to have an
assistant to help him in his Crawford Street shop (just off Baker Street
not far from Connan Doyles character, Sherlock Holmes). Majority of our
customers were Polish or jewish or entertainers.
The basis of my theoretical training was obtained by
attending night school classes at Regent Street Polytechnic.
After two years working with old radio's and repairing
vacuum cleaners, irons, heaters, hairdryers, blown fuses or public address
amplifiers, I decided to change to fixing Televisions and Hi Fi systems.
I started working for a retail chainestore called Civic
in Kensington High St. I had to move from store to store as a sort of locum
when the need arose, this lasted for about six years.
By then I had managed to earn the deposit for my first
house in Kingsbury and soon found employment locally working for a TV rental
company called Ketts doing house calls. I dislike doing house calls and
driving around in vans so I found another job locally in Harrow working
on the bench. By then I had lots of experience.
In my spare time I started buying faulty ex rental TV's
to recondition and advertised in the local paper for Mary to sell from
home.
This worked very well and I soon found a retail outlet
to sell from by sharing a shop with an old friend in Edgware who sold secondhand
goods.
The year was 1967 and the British economy was going through
a very bad phase so we started to dream about migrating to Australia.
Mary and I made good money at selling secondhand TV's
that allowed me to take time out to go to Southall Technical College for
further studies in Electronics and Colour TV Principles in preparation
to applying for assisted passage to Sunny Sydney.
I achieved my City & Guilds certificates and Australia
house was duly impressed by my family of three sons and one daughter and
my qualifications and the fact we had enough money to buy a house when
we finally arrived.
The Australian government paid for passage by sea and
we had the most unforgettable six week cruise of our lives. We stopped
over in Rotterdam, Lisbon, Panama, Curaco, Tahiti, Fiji and Wellington
finally arriving in Sydney in April 1969 at six in the morning with perfect
weather greeted by the dawn in the most spectacular harbor in the world.
Phase two
Sydney 1969 to 1971
In Sydney I found employment immediately subcontracting
my services to Unit TV doing field service (going to peoples homes) the
remuneration was excellent but I did not like driving around by car from
house to house and Mary was very homesick. I missed London and all things
English.
So we faced defeat and retreat and returned to London.
we settled for house in Mill Hill and I found avery good
job in Enfield working for the Co-operative Society as service manager
for their TV rental department.
This lasted for three years during which time we evaluated
our Australian experience carefully and came to the conclusion that although
homesickness had made us return, we were now sick of home, the economy
was even worse and power strikes made us cold and depressed so in 1974
we packed our home into shipping crates and then flew back to Sydney.
The rest is history as they say.
Phase three
1974 to 1981
Back in Sydney I persuaded Unit TV to take me back and
lived through a huge change in the Domestic Electronics industry. Colour
TV had arrived!
The years at Unit TV were very interesting, most of the
subcontrcting workforce could not cope with the new technology involved
in Colour TV including a change from valves to semiconductors.
For once in my life I was well prepared, having studied
the latest technology in London I had no trouble fitting in with
the companies needs. The whole industry realized new training was required
and young and old needed detailed training in semiconductors and Colour
TV Principles. Unit TV found an industry partner in none other than Japans
top electronics giant Sony to set up a training facility in conjunction
with Strathfield TAFE college. Within twelve months of helping to establish
a brand new syllabus I found myself having to teach 33 apprentices. The
most stressful thing I have ever done.
I was very pleased to get into my own TV repair business
in Manly in 1981 and get away from being mother and father confessor to
those young men. However the rewards came later when I gradually found
out that the majority had found good employment in Electronics. Most of
them took the trouble to seek me out and thank me for my part in their
careers.