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The Water Cooler
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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 2861397" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>I'd aspire to be the piano player in a whore house.</p><p></p><p>Seriously if I had to do it all over again, I'd choose the same path I stumbled into. Working on industrial control systems in a multi-craft environment made it fun and challenging to go to work every day. I love working on and fixing things, so when given the task of fixing a machine that is controlled by electronics, hydraulics, and pneumatics, diagnosing the problem and fixing it was satisfying work for me anyway. If it was a mechanical failure and required a part being built on a lathe or mill, no problem. Fix a circuit board that powers a servo, no problem, rebuild a hydraulic pump or weld up some brackets, same deal. It was fun working multi-craft. </p><p>That job requires a tremendous amount of overtime though. Lost a lot of family time, and holidays.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 2861397, member: 5412"] I'd aspire to be the piano player in a whore house. Seriously if I had to do it all over again, I'd choose the same path I stumbled into. Working on industrial control systems in a multi-craft environment made it fun and challenging to go to work every day. I love working on and fixing things, so when given the task of fixing a machine that is controlled by electronics, hydraulics, and pneumatics, diagnosing the problem and fixing it was satisfying work for me anyway. If it was a mechanical failure and required a part being built on a lathe or mill, no problem. Fix a circuit board that powers a servo, no problem, rebuild a hydraulic pump or weld up some brackets, same deal. It was fun working multi-craft. That job requires a tremendous amount of overtime though. Lost a lot of family time, and holidays. [/QUOTE]
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