The 30-Week Marathon:
Vasilii Kirillov's Unbreakable Streak and the Platform's Endurance Elite
In a platform where volume often steals the spotlight, one technician has quietly built something more valuable: an unshakeable rhythm. Vasilii Kirillov has logged jobs for 30 consecutive weeks—the longest active streak on the platform—and with 262 lifetime repairs and monthly volumes consistently in the 28-49 range, he's become the model of sustained excellence. While others chase triple-digit months, Kirillov's reliability tells a different story about what it takes to last.
He's not alone in the endurance race. Shaphan Hawks maintains a 15-week active streak with 242 lifetime repairs compressed into just 3 months, including an explosive April peak of 71 jobs that hints at enormous growth potential. Carlos Montano's 14-week streak reflects a different kind of ascent: 6 jobs in March, 23 in April, 30 in May. His Whirlpool Refrigerator specialty—10 repairs and counting—shows the power of focused expertise. And Carl Jarvis's 11-week streak caps a remarkable revival: after 3 years of sporadic activity, he logged 24 jobs in May and 18 in June, proving that comebacks are always possible.
But consistency and volume don't always go hand in hand. Danny Gutierrez leads all-time with 482 repairs, yet his 2026 has been volatile: 77 jobs in March, then just 11 in April, 11 in May, and 19 in June. Justin Nunn, ranked second all-time with 278 repairs, has hit similar turbulence. After four months of 100+ jobs, he logged just 5 in June, and his 2-week active streak is a shadow of his 17-week peak. Kirillov, ranked third all-time with 262 repairs, is the stability king. If his 30-week streak and steady 28-49 monthly volume hold, he could overtake Nunn by August.
Then there's Alex C, the platform's newest phenomenon. He logged 86 repairs in his first three weeks starting June 8, already ranking eighth all-time. His pace projects to 120+ monthly repairs if sustained. What makes Alex stand out is his category mix: LG Dryers (6), LG Washers (6), Whirlpool Washers (6), GE Washers (5), Samsung Refrigerators (5)—maximizing volume through breadth rather than specialization.
The platform's category trends reveal broader patterns. Samsung Refrigerators surged from 5 jobs in November 2025 to 27 in January 2026, then stabilized at 12-17 per month through June, suggesting seasonal demand. LG Washers jumped from 2 jobs in November 2025 to 21 in January 2026, stabilizing at 11-15 monthly—the January spike hints at platform-wide growth. Whirlpool Dryers grew from 1 job in November 2025 to 16 in April 2026, then dropped to 3 in May before recovering to 9 in June. That volatility suggests technician-driven patterns rather than steady demand.
The history books tell cautionary tales, too. Marco Palacios, ranked seventh all-time with 123 repairs, once maintained a 38-week streak—the longest in platform history. His current 1-week streak shows how hard consistency is to maintain. Hector Ruiz, ranked fourth all-time with 256 repairs, peaked at 85 jobs in December 2025 but has dropped to just 4 in May 2026. His 2-week streak is down from 12 weeks.
The platform's elite are separating into volume kings and consistency champions. The question for the coming weeks: Will the volume leaders stabilize, and can the consistency champions maintain their streaks?