Ironworker
Super OPE Member
- Local time
- 9:29 PM
- User ID
- 430
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2016
- Messages
- 261
- Reaction score
- 569
- Location
- Orange County NY
Union Ironworker.
I myself, am an electrician, a sparky if you will. I do enjoy my job...in the process of traveling for work now...not overly excited about that, as I have always been able to stay close to home.
I'm a logger some days.... mechanic other's.... Kinda wish i'd have been a gynecologist.. until i think about some of the possible client's
I got about 7 lay offs last year. Quit twice as well. I wouldn't know how to act if I was home all the time. This has been the longest run at home in 3 years now.Lol..just to get laid off again. This is my first time traveling. Been with the same company for 10 years. But I have had my fair share of off time, which is why I quit to travel.
Sounds like you have had quite the career. I was also teaching the local apprenticeship, until I started traveling. Have been doing that for 3 years now. Apprentices always want to learn PLC...but there is very little call for it where I live. Anything that I have to teach them on would be so outrageously outdated. I can give them the basics, teach them basic ladder diagrams, and input into a small pico controller...after doing that, they tend to lose interest..lol.I too am an Electrician by trade.
Did my apprenticeship 26 years ago in the Newcastle BHP Steelworks in Australia..... its gone now but WOW what an awesome place.
have worked in heavy industry in the Electrical field ever since.
Spent time working in open cut gold mining, underground copper mining (been 2.4km underground), electric motor overhaul, cotton ginning, power station construction, and wheat starch based food products processing.
Moved up to spend time as an Instrumentation Technician in power stations and coal mines and completed an Electrical engineering diploma in Industrial Electronics and PLC control.
Have worked for the last 9 years as a control system engineer in the coal mining industry programming all the stuff that makes the plants work when the operators click a button on a computer screen.
Automation is a great place for someone with a fault finding mind who wants to constantly learn , tinker and improve how things work. I love it.
Here is the Newcastle Steelworks. I was working in this at 16 years of age.
It looks kind of peacefull from the air but it claimed the lives of several workers per year, and that was still the same in the 90's when I was there and it shut.
Myself and another apprentice even found some poor bugger well cooked after his drill stalled in an electrical cable while drilling into concrete, and he grabbed the metal chuck to free it.
I could tell stories about my 4 years in that place for days!
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Is there still a lot of shops in your area. I worked as a pressman for 20 years. Made good money but hated it. There are no more printing jobs around here. Glad to be working in the trees now.25 year printing pressman. Went part time Jan 1. and I'm a month away from retiring from it. Burned out Going to lean on my wifes income till I figure out want I like to do. View attachment 7604
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You make water? Or keep it in the pi
pes?
Is there still a lot of shops in your area. I worked as a pressman for 20 years. Made good money but hated it. There are no more printing jobs around here. Glad to be working in the trees now.
Sounds like you have had quite the career. I was also teaching the local apprenticeship, until I started traveling. Have been doing that for 3 years now. Apprentices always want to learn PLC...but there is very little call for it where I live. Anything that I have to teach them on would be so outrageously outdated. I can give them the basics, teach them basic ladder diagrams, and input into a small pico controller...after doing that, they tend to lose interest..lol.
It is a great escape! I love being in the woods, saw in hand