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21st February 07, 11:59 AM
#11
 Originally Posted by Big Mikey
Here's me humping a dryer...
Tell me this means something other than what it appears to mean....
The kilt concealed a blaster strapped to his thigh. Lazarus Long
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21st February 07, 12:05 PM
#12
These are familiar sights in the Pacific NW. I once worked a layup line in a plywood mill for a few months. It's too much like work. My wife was a raiman operator for 10 years in a plywood mill (a raiman is a machine that punches out defects in veneer and replaces with those little football shaped plugs.)
Nice piccies, Big Mike.
Dale
--Working for the earth is not a way to get rich, it is a way to be rich
The Most Honourable Dale the Unctuous of Giggleswick under Table
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21st February 07, 12:06 PM
#13
Great pics Mike.... I work in an office these days and consequently my job is too boring to be of interest
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21st February 07, 12:09 PM
#14
Great pics, Mike, thanks for taking us along to your workplace.
Regional Director for Scotland for Clan Cunningham International, and a Scottish Armiger.
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21st February 07, 01:37 PM
#15
Not nearly as exciting... but my 2AM days are mostly in the past now! (I'm retired from that career and into my second one now. Still have to eat... and buy kilts... and motorcycles... sigh...)

Sometimes it amazes me they actually PAY me to do this stuff...

And of course, I know this picture actually belongs on the "Kilt DON'Ts" page...
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21st February 07, 01:52 PM
#16
Wow, I thought I had a hard job. I change and repair semi truck, dump truck and tractor tires. I do auto tires too, rarely. I drive a big service truck equipped with a boom arm for changing huge tires when I'm not in the shop.
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22nd February 07, 05:48 AM
#17
I retired as an instrument tech in a big chemical plant. My main job when I retired was calibrating, and maintaining pollution control analyzers on waste water streams leaving the plant. I also maintained control control valves, worked on Fisher/Rosemount PROVOX control systems as well as just about every kind of transmitter from old Foxboro pneumatic DP cells up to nuclear levels and density meters.
"A day spent in the fields and woods, or on the water should not count as a day off our allotted number upon this earth."
Jerry, Kilted Old Fart.
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22nd February 07, 06:07 AM
#18
That takes me back to my Engineering days in The Steel works
Many a hour inside boilers repairing then, Glad I don't do it now, very diry work, Great picture's
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22nd February 07, 06:08 AM
#19
 Originally Posted by McMurdo
Great shots BM
I would love to show you all some pics of my work, however there is a strict policy of no cameras at work. On the up side I can wear a kilt anytime I want.
Kilt or Camera...hmmm. not a hard decision! I work on bank equipment. Can't wear a kilt in America, but anywhere else in the world, My company says Sure. Too distracting in America. What would the ladies think when I had to climb a ladder?
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22nd February 07, 06:17 AM
#20
I am able to wear a kilt to work - just so long as it is black to match my court robe.
Regional Director for Scotland for Clan Cunningham International, and a Scottish Armiger.
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