all_ramped_up wrote:As an M Student, I'm aiming for my M2 but as someone with extensive electronics experience I'm wondering how I'd go about getting my E license after? I could see that M2/E combo as being pretty useful.
Probably a second logbook but as for getting tasks done... Anyone have any further info? Would it just be a matter of finding an E licensed AME to help out at whichever AMO I work at? 
Basically what I will say to this is pretty simple......You cannot do this. Well, not easily.
The E license, like the S license, requires specific training to be proven before being issued. That's why you rarely see the courses offered together (CONA in Gander, NL  in the only school that offers such an animal.....E and M together). So when you go to BCIT, or Centenial, or Canadaore, etc you pick one or the other. 
So lets take your case for example. When you graduate, you will have met the basic requirements for the AME-M (M1 or M2) license but will have no training credit towards the E license. Even if you had two logbooks filled out and worked as an E apprentice for many years as you mention, Transport would never recognize your previous M training towards the E license. Know what I'm saying here?
There are two routes that usually lead to the M2/E. It usually starts with folks who complete an E course in school who then go on to complete the AME-M ICS course at home in their spare time. If they already have an E licence and then go on to apprentice as an M for at least a year.....they can then write the Transport Canada exams and apply for the M. There is no ICS E or S course at this time.
The second, and more vague, route is the individual who possesses an M1/M2. Folks who say they can sign out anything because they have an M1/M2 are a little misguided but I understand where this notion comes from because CARS states this: "Individuals who hold both an M1 and M2 rating will not be issued any additional ratings (e.g. E or S ratings), as those privileges are already held within the scope of the combined M1/M2 rating privileges." 
Technically these people, if they can prove that they have appropriate training through their AMO, can sign out specialized E or S work (which would normally require an E or S license). It's just not so cut and dry.
Make sense? I know it's confusing but this is how it works.