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Necromancer
01-26-2014 08:13 PM
@ butthead:laughing: I hear ya, I'm kinda snowed in today as well. I hope the bad weather lets up and it gets nice out for a few days.
WWWP
01-26-2014 08:38 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Laces Out Dan!
(Post 1410373)
What do you all do for work?
I manage an independent bookstore.
anticipation
01-26-2014 08:48 PM
Professional skydive-porn photographer, I manage a Muay Thai dojo in Baltimore on the side and own a few cab companies in the southwest U.S.
Necromancer
01-26-2014 09:20 PM
There's no business like show business.
Dr_Rez
01-26-2014 10:34 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Necromancer
(Post 1410582)
There's no business like show business.
says who
Necromancer
01-26-2014 10:44 PM
Irving Berlin.
Sparky
01-27-2014 01:16 AM
went to er for acute chest pains. Turns out it was alchohol withdrawal haha. Got valium through an IV and like two bags of water. Was kinda embarrassing.
Plankton
01-27-2014 08:27 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lisnaholic
(Post 1410559)
I´m sure Senior Designer is not as simple as you make out, Plankton. I used to be an architectural technician and was often grateful that I could pass on the serious problems for the senior architect to sort out!
Spoiler for a technician´s nostagia:
The weirdest project I ever worked on was the refurbishment, i.e. remodelling of a sixty-year-old office building that was right next to Trafalgar Square, in the heart of London. It was a beautiful stone-clad seven-storey office building that had a furthur three floors underground. You go three floor underground and you´re talking about a very sinister, dank place. The walls were dripping and for structural reasons, we had to check out what the existing floor was made of, so one afternoon an exploratory hole was drilled and a core sample removed. When we went back the next morning, one complete basement floor was flooded! It turned out that when the building was constructed there were several local breweries in London, which kept the water-table artificially low. As industries re-located out of London in the 1960s to 80s, the water table rose to a much higher level and the basements were not adequately water-proofed.
Part of our job was to put an emergency generator in the basement, but as no-one would guarantee to water-proof such an old construction, this was the solution: put the generator on a plinth and cut a channel all round the base of the plinth. The theory being that if -or when- the water broke through again, it´d drain away harmlessly from around the generator. luckily, that decision was NOT my responsibility!
I hear ya! I only do the simple equations, and farm out anything that needs a PSE stamp.
I got my first CAD job right out of school 23 years ago, and started out on the board, but was forced into CAD using AutoCad for DOS, but I've used other CAD platforms too (ProE, Solidworks, Microstation, etc.). Since then things have gotten familiar and simple. Sometimes I go weeks with nothing but no-brainers. Guess I've been doing it long enough to have that luxury.
I've worked in a few Archy firms, the most notable probably being one that had me doing the drawings for structural upgrades to the Chrysler building (Chicago), and the score board at Madison Square Garden.
I've been pretty much all over the map as far as drafting disciplines though, Mech, Struct, Elec, and some Civil, and have worked for some big business companies (ComEd, Federal Signal, GM,), but I'm quite happy doing the work I do now, which is basically saving people, and their pets through training using the units I design.
Funhouses for Firemen, is what I call it.
Penny Lane 64
01-27-2014 10:54 AM
Got to sleep in because I am off work today. It is nice to just chill out and relax on this Monday.