Your Career or what you do day to day?

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Thread: Your Career or what you do day to day?

  1. #21
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Grand Island NY
    Posts
    330
    started out as a welder fabricator working for a hazardous waste clean up company. then got into running heavy equiptment, like dozers and excavators. my toys from the sand box just got bigger and I get paid to do it now

  2. #22
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    innisfil,ontario
    Posts
    1,430
    been working at the same HVAC company since 1987.am a licenced gas fitter and oil burner mechanic.also am a sheet metal mechanic doing mainly new home heating system installs for quite a number of years.last 4-5 years have been challenging,certainly had to diversify.watched our workers get laid off 1 by 1 to a staff of less then half of what is was.boss must of felt sorry for me because im still working.

  3. #23
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Central NJ
    Posts
    1,470
    Hydraulic application engineer. After 35 years of design fixing and installing hydraulic system I sold my company I am now working for the company that purchased the company that purchased my company. Working for a some what larger company who thinks i'm over paid. Now I'm on my 3rd boss at that company, Something about linear integration or is it vertical intimidation.
    O, yea sorry for the rant, I'm sure we all have our stories. Anyway I went to school to become a shop teacher back in the 70's but have 2 years of engineering, did spend some time working in a socialist country in Europe for about 6 months in 1975. Yes there is no place like home. Repaired lots of big hydraulic system in the marine and offshore industries, Was even in the ship salvage and marine pollution control business for awhile. Now I design and install hydraulic systems. I keep trying to convince HR I'm not a plumber.

  4. #24
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    East Bethel, Minnesota
    Posts
    104
    Began full time work life at 18 with UPS working in the automotive dept. (Big Brown Trucks). Retired a year ago. Now I work full time on 6x6, vintage sleds and hot rods.

  5. #25
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Bryan, Texas
    Posts
    748
    I work for my dad farming rice and soybeans right now. In the off season when we're not farming we do alot of equipment maitnance, which can range from changing oil to completly rebuilding irrigation pump engines, we even fabricate impliments sometimes. I'm also about a month from earning my pilot's liscense, and currently going to a local college to finish out my high school(dual credit), but I hope to go to Georgia Tech to major in mechanical engineering. It might be a pipe dream, but I'd like to put the Hustler AATV back on the market...(with some ideas I have for improvments).
    1983 Hustler 945-HK 627cc Vanguard
    1982 GMC K-10 Sierra Classic Suburban 6.2 Diesel
    2010 Chevy Silverado 1500
    1974 Honda ATC 70
    1986 Honda ATC 250ES Big Red

    There is no Z in Diesel!!

  6. #26
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Buffalo, NY area
    Posts
    2,968
    Quote Originally Posted by jerseybigfoot View Post
    Hey Mike I bet you didn't think anybody heard of a Moyno pump. AKA bent worm rotor with a rubber stator. Esplain how dat Moyno works again?
    I was about a year out of college when I helped a drilling contractor rip apart a fragged Moyno in the field. I'd never even heard of such an animal, but to see how simple the concept was, and how in the world they fabricate that rotor was incredible. It makes grinding a camshaft for a V-12 look like a piece of cake.

  7. #27
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Grand Island NY (Buffalo)
    Posts
    254
    Toolmaker/machinist by trade. Worked my way up the ladder to Mechanical Design Engineer for a corporation that does inkjet printing. I get to go from computer to the machine shop to build electromechanical prototypes for our latest developments. Very interesting job. I have been building things since I was a little kid.

    Did a stint in the service, long, long time ago. Jet engine mechanic then machinist.

  8. #28
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    Cayley, Alberta
    Posts
    472
    All I can say is Wow! Just out of the 27 posts (minus the comments of course :P) everyone has their own interesting line of work that builds into the whole mosaic of a countries economic structure. I find it fascinating the amount of wealth in knowledge and experience that is brought to the table through a single interest in AATV's and for that alone I would like to congratulate you all -- for a job worth doing and a job well done!

  9. #29
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Rockwell, N.C.
    Posts
    2,627
    Quote Originally Posted by guyfox View Post
    Well at the ripe old age of 43, i have been retired for the past 4 years. After finishing high school I joined the Canadian Forces. I use to be an Ammunition Tech (use to blow things up and play with bombs....LOL). Retired after 201/2years and went back to school. I am now a registered massage therapist. Quite the career change i know. I now only work to pay for toys that i want. It is a hard life but someone has to retire early to enjoy life....

    Guyfox
    Strange to find someone in the same field. USMC has the designation 2300.

  10. #30
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    statesville, north carolina
    Posts
    2,604
    Quote Originally Posted by lewis View Post
    Strange to find someone in the same field. USMC has the designation 2300.
    Damn Lewis, didn't know the USMC had a # for Massage tech... might have been useful to know after the last lap at Ashtabula, or several Busco rides Kidding of course... Getting paid to blow stuff doesn't sound bad... but there's usually those guys on the other side trying to blow stuff up too.... that aspect does not sound so fun....
    Last edited by racerone3; 08-24-2011 at 06:52 PM.
    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

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