Sunday, June 30, 2013

Hey Irish, What Have You Been Up To?

"Making hundreds of these little farking parts"



11 comments:

  1. They remind me of the little cubes from the alien spacecraft in Super 8. And dude, thanks for all the traffic your blog sends to mine. Every time I turn around someone is visiting me from here.

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    1. Thanks for stopping by as well. I'm glad you get some traffic :)

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  2. Ha,"farking".

    Were you watching Johnny Dangerously lately?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQylAGThK68

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  3. My eyes now suck.
    What are those little things?

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    1. Hi Timbo, they are some little machined parts for one of my customers. I have no idea what they do.

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  4. Yeah, I love when we get orders from the field for thousands of one particular part. And some of the things we do can be a pretty lengthy process. I've spent days on one order of hanging straps, first they have to have a hole punched in either end, then all of them rolled, then he ends broke on a 90. Fun.

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  5. I spent one summer working for Grumman Aircraft in Bethpage, LI, punching out parts on a 20 ton press. One guy in the shop spent all day on a little press punching out washers. One at a time: *punch* slide the stock forward *punch* slide *punch* slide while chain smoking Luckies. This was 1968 and he did it since WWII.

    One cool thing. I punched out parts for the Lunar Module that was assembled about 200 feet behind me in the plant.

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  6. Wow Sig, that's something to tell the grandkids!
    Very cool. The moonshot was the greatest
    event of my lifetime - and you got to be part of it!

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  7. Fellow NASA EX! I spent some time in/around 1988, mainly to prove a point that they didn't need a 500,000K inventory system for tracking parts for the shuttle. I wrote it in a 4G, proved that about 80% of their critical inventory was fucked up, when I ran the verify script :) Yeah, took about a week, had a setup to force Serializing inventory, gave them a way to adjust inventory for various reasons and it worked at a cost of $0.00. That was about the time my carrier there took a major dumper...they still spent the $500,000.00+ for a new linux box and software - I helped install part of that, and it didn't do much more than what I wrote. I wonder why I don't trust the Government?

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  8. Timbo - I saw a LM in the Smithsonian Aerospace Museum the last time I was in DC. But I think that was a later one. You'd laugh if you saw the 1968 "clean room" that the LM was assembled in. A wood lattice with clear plastic covering it and a positive pressure vent system. I saw it every time I walked to the crapper. My BIL was one of the aerospace engineers who was hired for the LM project fresh out of college (another funny story how I first met him, but anyway he met my sister who was a secretary at Grumman's). He has a whole bunch of stories about the LM. It was first called the Lunar Excursion Module but they changed the name because it sounded like it was made for a frivolous purpose.

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  9. Hey Irish.... that is an L7 connection spacer for the Flux Capacitor..Sheesh everyone knows that...

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