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Thermal Imaging, Infrared Cameras & Energy Audits Contains discussions about thermal imaging, infrared cameras, energy audits, and more.

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  #16  
Old 10/14/08, 10:37 AM
Henry Valenzano, CMI's Avatar
Henry Valenzano, CMI Henry Valenzano, CMI is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

I dont know who has a better training class for sure. I have only gone to the one from Flir/ITC But after seven years of using an IR camera there is only one company that that has asked if i was certified. It was Not the judge and it was not a customer. I have a certification on the wall and a card in my wallet but the only person that says i am not certified is Flir/ITC and they are the one that sold me the camera, took my money, gave me the schooling, gave me the test, and issued the certificate and card But they have no record of the training. Go figure. Point is if you go to court and you are wrong. Certified or not you are going to loose.

If all of the IR schools want to give me a free IR class I will let you know which one is better.



Henry Valenzano CMI (Hank)
Double Check Home Inspection LLC.
www.DCHI.com Hank@DCHI.com 719-635-6425
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  #17  
Old 10/14/08, 8:00 PM
David A. Andersen's Avatar
David A. Andersen David A. Andersen is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Quote:
I'm still confused.
Your not standing alone!

Page 1 of Chapter 2 in the ITC training manual discusses thermographer certification as ITC views it in the world. This is what I posted initially.

I hardly believe that the world's largest commercial infrared manufacturer is going to set up something that is not going to stand the test of court!

This is totally ludicrous.

There is an army aviation division that flies over my house on a daily basis with Flir equipment hanging all over it.

Every white camera hanging underneath the traffic helicopters in your local cities was built by Flir.

Our borders are protected exclusively with equipment. Our police departments, our fire departments, our wildlife officers, all use Filr equipment!

During my inspection yesterday the investor who is selling the house saw my Flir case sitting on the front porch and immediately recognized what it was from his past military experience.

My Ferrier immediately recognized my Flir because of his multiple tours of duty in Iraq utilizing Flir target acquisition equipment.

When the whole world around me recognizes Flir, I hardly suspect they will not be recognized in a court of law.

Seeing as you did not provide documented proof when questioned by David Valley & Kevin Richardson, I can only assume that there is none, and its solely your own humble opinion and you are simply a legend in your own mind!

You provide some good information on this site, but I think you've gone a little bit overboard here.

Just because you have copyright on a few words on an insignia doesn't make you the world's expert! Nick has a bucket full of those words. It doesn't mean a NACHI home inspector is certified and nobody else is worth squat!

So don't be hiding behind your copyright!



"Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different results." Albert Einstein

David A. Andersen & Associates
Clarksville - Nashville Home Inspector Lic#40
http://www.midtninspections.com
ITC Level III Thermographer Cert#1958
Building Science Thermographer Cert#33784
http://www.thermalimagingscan.com
HVAC Certification EPA Cert#2046620
BPI# 5015804
Link to my Website at: http://www.midtninspections.com/link-submission

Last edited by dandersen; 10/14/08 at 8:04 PM..
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  #18  
Old 10/14/08, 9:56 PM
Dan Bowers, CMI Dan Bowers, CMI is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Guys -

We're getting out there from my original question. I think John Snell has simply ventured his opinion on something he has more qualifications on than most of us do ...............

We are in the opinion business. Thats what we do for a living.

I don't say it on this site because I don't wanta hurt anybodies feelings, but I'm better at what I do than the rest of you guys are.

If your opinion is different than mine, I try to be polite to you knowing however that your opinion is wrong.

Nobody except for a ??????? inspector is qualified to spit on the sidewalk.

See where I'm going with this ......................

Now for my finale - I can walk on water - Just don't tell anybody its frozen water.


Best Wishes
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  #19  
Old 10/14/08, 11:01 PM
Joe Farsetta's Avatar
Joe Farsetta Joe Farsetta is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Quote:
this is not addressed in the certification issued by either FLIR/ITC or Infraspection and so they are not in full compliance.
This is the opinion of a training competetitor, and is therefore skewed.
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  #20  
Old 10/15/08, 12:19 AM
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jrivera jrivera is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Quote:
Originally Posted by dbowers View Post
I can walk on water
I too can walk on water (but my water is triple filtered). Which makes mine better !!!

Mic
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  #21  
Old 10/15/08, 1:35 AM
Dan Bowers, CMI Dan Bowers, CMI is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Cool ............
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  #22  
Old 10/15/08, 9:32 AM
John Snell John Snell is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

I've been posting here long enough to know folks on this message board do not hesitate to jump into discussions! While sometimes it feels a bit crazy, I appreciate that this can be a way to move a discussion forward.

My intent is NOT to insult anyone or speak disparagingly of them. While I try my best to be even handed, obviously I've not fully succeeded in communicating what I'd hope to in this thread. Let me try again.

Certification under both ASNT and ISO standards is based on training, documented, qualifying experience and testing. Under ASNT, the employer certifies. Under ISO, "central certification" is provided by a "certifying body" in each country—in the US none is not available for thermography at this time.

Training can be provided by any qualified training organization; under ASNT the employer determines who that is and under ISO the training organization must be authorized by the government body.

MANY of our customers have taken training from other companies, such as FLIR/ITC and Infraspection, and this can absolutely be counted toward their certification, under either ASNT or, in many cases, under ISO. So none of what I've been saying is about Snell training being better than others or that their training is not as good as ours.

The point I've tried to make is about certification. I maintain that viable certification is based on standards like ASNT and ISO. The fact that others grant and promote their own version of certification has, IMHO, confused matters. Worse, it left us in a position where a thermography may promote themselves as being certified—even displaying a colorful graphic or showing a wallet card—when what they have is not grounded in a standard. Could they still be a good thermographer? Certainly. But it makes it difficult or impossible to understand what "certification" actually means for the customer.

I don't know if this responds to all of the questions that have been raised. If there are more I've left unanswered and you can re-post them, I'm happy to try to respond from my point of view.

Thermally yours,

John Snell
ASNT NDT Thermal/Infrared Level III #48166
Snell Infrared
800-636-9820
802-229-9820
http://www.thesnellgroup.com
http://www.IRTalk.com
http://www.learnnewsolutions.com/
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  #23  
Old 10/15/08, 10:00 AM
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mbartels mbartels is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

I did my Level 1 training with The Snell Group and was impressed with the level of expertise that the trainers had. One of the trainers worked for NASA doing thermal imaging on the space shuttle, another had done thermography since, I think, the early or mid 1980’s. (John, Feel free to correct if I’m wrong) The class participants brought there own cameras witch included Flier, Fluke, Raz-Ir, Palmer Wahl, and a few others I can’t remember at this moment. I thought using all of the different camera brands was great. The instructors did demonstrations with Fluke, Flir, and other cameras. I operated a $4,500 camera, a $50,000 camera, and a few in-between. The training and testing was both hands on applications and pen and paper. I can honestly say that I learned a hell of a lot and plan on getting more training in the future. I think the one thing that everyone here that has gone through Level 1 training, or higher, will agree on is that it is a must before performing inspections for a fee. I don’t care if it is through Snell, Flir, or infraspection, just do it! Any of these will stand up in court or for marketing purposes better than, I read a lot of message boards and played around with it a lot before charging people.
BTW. All of the different brands of cameras I used and observed did similar things. I can say after seeing all these different cameras that this blind loyalty to Flir by some sounds ridiculous. They make great cameras but they are by no means the be all and end all of thermal imaging. Its like saying that Honda is better than Toyota, which is better than Chevy, but not as good as Ford, which is similar to Nissan.
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  #24  
Old 10/15/08, 4:04 PM
David A. Andersen's Avatar
David A. Andersen David A. Andersen is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Quote:
I can say after seeing all these different cameras that this blind loyalty to Flir by some sounds ridiculous.
When you sit behind a Flir on an Apache "Long Bow" gunship I'll pay more attention to you.

We might be able to make a better comparison if all the camera stats were "standardized" as J Snell proposes. When you have sensitivity stats at different temps you can't compare anything.

Is a 120 x 120 the same as 180 x 120? No, it's a rectangle instead of a square. But having more pixels overall does not always improve resolution.

It's not blind loyalty.

ITC is separate from Flir, and for obvious reasons.
During my attendance at Flir/ITC I have not heard a single instructor there talk up or down about any camera manufacturers. We had practically every conceivable camera in the classroom. Positive and negative points for brought out for each one's application not because of the branding, but often just its physical size and shape.
I don't see impartiality in some of the other vendors out there however.




"Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different results." Albert Einstein

David A. Andersen & Associates
Clarksville - Nashville Home Inspector Lic#40
http://www.midtninspections.com
ITC Level III Thermographer Cert#1958
Building Science Thermographer Cert#33784
http://www.thermalimagingscan.com
HVAC Certification EPA Cert#2046620
BPI# 5015804
Link to my Website at: http://www.midtninspections.com/link-submission
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  #25  
Old 10/15/08, 5:33 PM
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kweiss kweiss is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

If I understand correctly I think the problem here, and what Dan is asking, is that there is not government or authoritative organization that "certifies" thermagraphy. ASNT and such define certain standards, parameters and practices. I am making no comment as to who is better or right or wrong, just trying to understand this process like Dan.

They then leave it to the individual companies or organizations or universities or whatever to research the standards, decide what is applicable to them and set up a standard by which they will then "certify" there employees - in house. I am not exactly sure of the comparison but maybe similar to Microsoft certification or something like that.

I would venture to guess that this is due to the nature of thermography and how it was traditionally used in the past. Probably similiar to how different fields might "certify" people as qualified in certain ASNT or other Asomething scientific standards.

So taking that further, if I understand their positions, Mr. Snell supports this traditional application of the standard and the definition and application of "certified" - as "in house in the corporate environment. While ITC/Flir and Infraspection, perhaps recognizing that new applications are being developed and used that are not corporation related, have decided to develop something similiar to the in house criteria that a big corporation might develop and call it a certification. This is neither right nor wrong , IMHO, but I would consider it more of a marketing thing than a governing body type of certification.

Does that sound right? So ultimately, to answer Dan's question, while there is a standard to which Thermography should be taught, there is NOT an official governing body nor an official certification. You may get something like that from your provider, but it is much like the NACHI "certification," and does not stand alone in the world and may or may not mean anything - depending on who you are talking to.

I have no allegence to any of these providers. I went somewhere else, I also learned most of the concepts needed at Texas A&M from a prof who, amoung other things in his past also worked for NASA, in my engineering/heat transfer classes. I have a "certificate" and it "says" that it certifies me as having completed training to the standards of the ASNT. Which I think is vague at best.

I plan to get my level II this spring probably. More than likely, I will go to one of the three providers we have discussed here. Much of that choice, since the tuitions are all about the same and reports from past students are all good, will prbably boil down to the location of the class relative to mine. I would venture to guess, that like most education, most of what you learn depends upon the quality of your individual instructor, their experience, and then the curiculum. If they are all basically developed from the same ASNT and ISO standards, it stands to reason that the curiculums are probably similar. Is a FLIR instructor personally better just because he works for FLIR than another equally experienced individual who has simila training and experience but doesn't work for a manufacturer? I haven't seen anyone, at least on this board, who bashed the training they received from any of these providers - so I doubt it. I wen tot a very good university and I still had some good professors and some that really sucked - but they were all professors at a good university. As others have said, despite the fact that there may not be a overall government standard for thermography, I believe that training is most inportant.




Kevin Weiss

Professional Inspector
Level I Infrared
www.AbsoluteInspections.net
www.homeinspectorsplanotx.com
www.homeinspectorsmckinney.com
Absolute Inspections, LLC
972-463-0887

Last edited by kweiss; 10/15/08 at 5:46 PM..
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  #26  
Old 10/15/08, 6:06 PM
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mbartels mbartels is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Mr. Anderson,

The next time I bring my Apache "Long Bow" gunship to a home inspection I’ll be sure to bring a Flir camera.
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  #27  
Old 10/15/08, 6:35 PM
Brian E. Kelly's Avatar
Brian E. Kelly Brian E. Kelly is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Quote:
Originally Posted by dbowers View Post
One of the guys said that with Flir, the Level I Certification involves taking the 4 day class - passing their test - then doing a report.

Then you get certified for a 5 year period. Its all included in the Level I Class you take from them.

So thats Flir's Certification process & you renew it every 5 years.

Anybody know what Flukes process for Level I Certification is? How long its good for? AND is it all included in the Level I Class FEE OR is it extra??

Same questions with Infraspections Level I Certification requirements; how long recerification time frame is; AND if any extra fees, etc for the Certification process.

Somebody said your employer CERTIFY's you - BUT most of us are our employers.................

You have answered your own question with your last sentence Dan.
http://www.asnt.org/shop/merchant.ihtml?pid=1517&step=4

Buy the ASNT TC 1A document and set up your own program and certify yourself.

The non destructive community/customers may or may not accept your own in house certification. My guess is that Harriet Homeowner will accept your in house cert and let you charge a fee to scan her house.

Some other customers may have more stringent requirements that they would have you meet before they would use your service.
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  #28  
Old 10/15/08, 7:26 PM
Jim Seffrin Jim Seffrin is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Quote:
Originally Posted by kweiss View Post
If I understand correctly I think the problem here, and what Dan is asking, is that there is not government or authoritative organization that "certifies" thermagraphy. ASNT and such define certain standards, parameters and practices. I am making no comment as to who is better or right or wrong, just trying to understand this process like Dan.

They then leave it to the individual companies or organizations or universities or whatever to research the standards, decide what is applicable to them and set up a standard by which they will then "certify" there employees - in house. I am not exactly sure of the comparison but maybe similar to Microsoft certification or something like that.

I would venture to guess that this is due to the nature of thermography and how it was traditionally used in the past. Probably similiar to how different fields might "certify" people as qualified in certain ASNT or other Asomething scientific standards.

So taking that further, if I understand their positions, Mr. Snell supports this traditional application of the standard and the definition and application of "certified" - as "in house in the corporate environment. While ITC/Flir and Infraspection, perhaps recognizing that new applications are being developed and used that are not corporation related, have decided to develop something similiar to the in house criteria that a big corporation might develop and call it a certification. This is neither right nor wrong , IMHO, but I would consider it more of a marketing thing than a governing body type of certification.

Does that sound right? So ultimately, to answer Dan's question, while there is a standard to which Thermography should be taught, there is NOT an official governing body nor an official certification. You may get something like that from your provider, but it is much like the NACHI "certification," and does not stand alone in the world and may or may not mean anything - depending on who you are talking to.

I have no allegence to any of these providers. I went somewhere else, I also learned most of the concepts needed at Texas A&M from a prof who, amoung other things in his past also worked for NASA, in my engineering/heat transfer classes. I have a "certificate" and it "says" that it certifies me as having completed training to the standards of the ASNT. Which I think is vague at best.

I plan to get my level II this spring probably. More than likely, I will go to one of the three providers we have discussed here. Much of that choice, since the tuitions are all about the same and reports from past students are all good, will prbably boil down to the location of the class relative to mine. I would venture to guess, that like most education, most of what you learn depends upon the quality of your individual instructor, their experience, and then the curiculum. If they are all basically developed from the same ASNT and ISO standards, it stands to reason that the curiculums are probably similar. Is a FLIR instructor personally better just because he works for FLIR than another equally experienced individual who has simila training and experience but doesn't work for a manufacturer? I haven't seen anyone, at least on this board, who bashed the training they received from any of these providers - so I doubt it. I wen tot a very good university and I still had some good professors and some that really sucked - but they were all professors at a good university. As others have said, despite the fact that there may not be a overall government standard for thermography, I believe that training is most inportant.
Dear Kevin:

Thank you for your post. Since you raise several questions, I will do my best to answer them in turn below.

In the US, there is no governmental agency that certifies thermographers. ASNT is a volunteer organization that publishes standards for certification of nondestructive test personnel. Included in the many documents they publish is Recommended Practice No. SNT-TC-1A. This document details requirements and suggestions for setting up an employer-based certification program. One of the methodologies covered by TC-1A is the Thermal/Infrared Method (thermography).

Presently, ASNT does provide certification in the Thermal/Infrared Method; however, this is limited to Level III where requirements are far beyond the practical means of most home inspectors and professional thermographers. ASNT does not certify anyone to Level I or Level II in the Thermal/Infrared Method.

Semantics aside, SNT-TC-1A is considered a standard as it is used by thousands of companies to train and qualify their personnel in several NDT disciplines including thermography. While the document does provide some specific requirements, it allows an employer wide latitude it setting their criteria for certification in order that personnel may be trained and qualified to meet the need of the employer and/or their customers.

As a point of clarification, it is the employer's responsibility to certify his/her employees under TC-1A even if they hire an outside agency for training or guidance in setting up an employer-based certification program. It is not the duty of, nor is it possible for any outside agency or any training company to take over this responsibility from an employer.

Although I have requested his refrain, Mr. Snell has continued to cleverly misrepresent my company's practices and policies within this thread. This has resulted in readers of this board to be both misinformed and to make inaccurate inferences. I will go no further than to say that it is exactly this type of behavior that is responsible for much of the confusion surrounding the topic of certification.

As I detailed in an earlier post, the title Infraspection Institute Certified Infrared Thermographer® was developed by Infraspection Institute over 25 years ago. Since that time, we have trained thousands of thermographers worldwide utilizing a curriculum that draws from the suggested topical outlines in TC-1A. Our training course curricula are updated regularly to reflect current industry practices, procedures, and standards. The diplomas that we issue our graduates state that they have successfully completed a course of study which meets the training requirements for Thermal/infrared Method as specified by SNT-TC-1A.

For those interested in learning exactly what SNT-TC-1A contains, I would recommend they purchase a copy of this document. With only 12 pages comprising the core document, it is a fast read. The language is also plain and easy to understand.

As to marketing, there is nothing wrong with advertising one's credentials including training, experience, and appropriate certification(s) whether it be thermography or home inspection. When it comes to training of any type, I would recommend that one carefully consider course curriculum, instructor's qualifications and experience, and the integrity of the training firm.

One should not assume that all infrared training is standardized or equal in the same way that homeowners should not assume that all home inspectors are equally qualified just because they have similar certifications.

The intent of my post is an attempt to answer your question fairly and directly without any marketing hype. Having nearly 25 years experience as a practicing thermographer, instructor, and standards developer, I can assure you that the topic of certification in thermography is one of perpetual interest and frequent confusion.

Lastly, should anyone have further questions on the topic of certification, I would invite you to contact me directly.



Jim Seffrin, Director

Infraspection Institute

425 Ellis Street
Burlington, NJ 08016
609-239-4788

SuccessIRies.com
IRINFO.ORG
IRINFOConference.com

Last edited by jseffrin; 10/16/08 at 12:53 AM..
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  #29  
Old 10/15/08, 9:04 PM
Dan Bowers, CMI Dan Bowers, CMI is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

Quote:
Although I have requested his refrain, Mr. Snell has continued to cleverly misrepresent my company's practices and policies within this thread. This has resulted in readers of this board to be both misinformed and to make inaccurate inferences. I will go no further than to say that it is exactly this type of behavior that is responsible for much of the confusion surrounding the topic of certification.
I'm missing something here. I apologise but I didn't see Mr Snell abuse anyone personally. Just ventured his opinion for those of us trying to understand something about the certification process
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  #30  
Old 10/16/08, 9:23 PM
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Nick Gromicko Nick Gromicko is offline
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Default Re: Level I Certification Process

99.5 % of the skills needed to be able to use an IR camera properly during an inspection comes from being able to perform a proper inspection and nothing to do with the camera itself. You have to know where to aim the camera and what you are aiming at.

Home inspectors have a vast, wide knowledge and understanding of the thing their inspecting (the home), just like medical doctors understand the human body.

A level 1 scalpel school could probably teach me to use a scalpel in 2 days, but would you have me perform surgery on your body? Hell no. The course would be totally useless to a non-doctor because 99.5% of the skills required to properly perform surgery have nothing to do with using the scalpel....just like a Level 1, or 2, or 3, or 57 course on IR cameras is totally useless to non-InterNACHI members.

There is good reason for www.infraredcertified.com requiring membership in InterNACHI FIRST....

..... www.nachi.org/rigorous2006.htm



Nick Gromicko, Certified Master Inspector

Find a Home Inspector
"Just as iron sharpens iron, one man sharpens another." Proverbs 27:17

Last edited by gromicko; 10/16/08 at 9:29 PM..
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