Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Capt. Mooron wrote:
A month on the next contract and by then hopefully one of our bids should be successful and I'll be staying for another project. I'm hoping to keep working until April and then drive my friend's truck from Yellowknife to Halifax before the Mackenzie Ice Bridge closes... that's usually around April15th. You'll be hoping for cold weather in April, then? :-) Good luck with the on-going contract - can't beat an extension if it pays well, especially if the work's interesting/fun. That should net me the 50K I need to live the rest of the year without having to work.... That's a tidy wee haul for a few months. :-) Looking for some more work myself - my last bagful of cash is depleted. I normally do IT, but I've been gradually moving into CAD work in the construction industry. (IT has become too specialised around here for an all-rounder, and there are too many specialist bods chasing the jobs after IT redundancies at the big financial houses.) Last construction job was drawing layouts for two million yellow dots to a *very* precise brief - pin-point accurate positioning on irregular, sorta-ovoid, sectional windows up to 30m long and 3-4m high. They were screen printed onto the glazing (inside laminated glass) for a seriously bendy building (Selfridge's new flagship department store in Birmingham). I semi-automated the drawing process by making ACAD and Rhino jump through hoops. (That was the key skill that got me the contract - automation and coding is kinda outwith the average construction draftsman's skillset). Then I did loads of 3D brackets to hold the glass to the building - worked purely to a Rhino model of the structure - not a right angle anywhere, no flat surfaces to be had apart from the floors and the glazing panels. The main contractor worked to the same model and made the building by spraying concrete onto a huge reinforcing steel mesh. The brackets went where they were supposed to, the glass went onto the brackets, and it all fitted together. All effectively tele-worked - I've never seen the building in the flesh. *Damned* interesting stuff. :-) ... and I can collect pogey for 6 months as well to offset my bar tab. I had to look up "pogey" and found out it's a Brit term - never heard it round these 'ere parts. :-) -- Wally www.artbywally.com |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
GRETTIR'S SAGA (continued) | ASA | |||
Eastman's guide to exposing the 9-11 mass-murder frameup to justify world-domination to an otherwise isolationist American public | ASA | |||
The Bahamas, Key West and back. | Cruising | |||
back with a problem now | General |