The Skilled Trade Blog
Promote the Skilled trades!
Categories:

Archives:
Meta:
March 2009
M T W T F S S
    Jul »
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  
03/09/09
Protected:
Filed under: General, Toolmakers
Posted by: Scott @ 1:26 pm

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

Enter your password to view comments
03/05/09
Protected: Help promote your trade
Filed under: Toolmakers, Electricians, Carpenters, Mechanics, Welders
Posted by: AMH @ 10:59 am

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

Enter your password to view comments
03/02/09
Welcome!
Filed under: General
Posted by: AMH @ 8:59 am

As a machine shop we have noticed a diminishing number of young people going into the fine, and once highly respected trade fields.  

My father was an engineer working with toolmakers, and technicians from the 1950’s to the early 1990’s. 

One story he told me sticks indelibly in my mind.

He was once giving a tour of a manufacturing plant containing assembly machines designed by his department several years earlier. He strolled knowledgably with a string of business suits following him and listening to his explanations of the wonders of the equipment his team designed. The whole time a wily veteran technician of 30+ years kept his eye on the group. This technician had the task of keeping the equipment running three shifts a day, which he did successfully for many years.

When the group came to the station where the technician was working he promptly pulled a handful of steel rollers from his pocket and walked to stand in front of my father, who, by the way, was VP of Engineering for this company, and interrupted his conversation. This veteran in his blue work shirt held out the rollers to my father and dumped them in his hand. He stated “This is from your machine. Once a week I pick up all the rollers off the floor and replace the bearing. It takes 2 hours. Thought you should know.” He then turned away and went back to work.

Though my father was stunned by his approach, he investigated the problem and found the technician had been reporting the problem to the department for a year but apparently no one thought a report from a mere technician was worth investigating. The project engineer was promptly sent to the plant to help the technician pick up the rollers until the problem was fixed.

Take from this story what you will, but it always reminds me to respect all aspects of the manufacturing profession.

 

1 comment