View Single Post
  #12   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
pyotr filipivich pyotr filipivich is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,355
Default A rhetorical question

I missed the Staff meeting, but the Memos showed that "Lloyd E.
Sponenburgh" lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote on Mon, 15 Sep 2008
12:53:49 -0500 in rec.crafts.metalworking :
I have a casual acquaintance who I respect for one of his areas of
expertice. Besides that knowlege, he claims to have been "a machinist
for decades". He's of retirement age now.

Recently, he instructed a raw-beginner HSM on how to turn long tapers
using the compound and frequent re-chucking, and using a file for
dressing up the jaggies. When I suggested turning between centers and
offsetting the tailstock, he bristled, saying that it was
"impossible" to ever get the tailstock back on center again.

Later he made a comment to another fellow allowing that "owning a
lathe and a mill would only be a dream for me."

Can I presume this guy is NOT "a machinist"? G

Or is it possible that production-floor machine _operators_ call
themselves that?


Or are called that, think they are that, and are really just
"button monkeys" Some of them may learn the trade, but ... well I'm
learning the "problems" which occur when all you've done for a set up
is put fixtures in predefined locations, load ,material and go.
This machining is really wild. I'm learning a lot, but I'm also
building the base of previous 'experience'.


pyotr
--
pyotr filipivich
"I had just been through hell and must have looked like death warmed
over walking into the saloon, because when I asked the bartender
whether they served zombies he said, ‘Sure, what'll you have?'"
from I Hear America Swinging by Peter DeVries