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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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![]() "artfulbodger" wrote in message I know a guy who's a commercial diver & welder. He's been at it for ten or fifteen years, and he's good at it: he's one of about a dozen people on the planet certified to weld the pressure hulls of nuclear subs while they're still in the briny. That's an amazing assertion. A "wet" weld can only have 80% strength and 50% ductility becaues of the quenching action of the water. There are only a couple of rods that will work underwater. How is it that a weak brittle weld would be allowed in a pressure hull weld? I don't believe I've ever heard of that cert. He's the Manly Man type, but he says the work is just plain Godawful hard (plus there are lots of ways to die while doing it). To him, diving is about as exciting as laying bricks. It is just the elevator that takes you to work. You have to know what to do when you get there. It is far easier to teach a welder how to dive than a diver how to weld. You can teach a monkey how to dive. Diving is a blast when you can see. It's just that most of the time, you can't see anything. How does one weld when they can't see the weld? But he's very, very well paid, works when he feels like it and doesn't when he doesn't. That's odd. When I worked, if you "didn't feel like working" when a company called you, they just didn't call you again. 80% of life is showing up, and when you won't show up, they will use a more reliable if less able worker. "Not feeling like it" was not a valid reason. There were no valid reasons unless you were injured. And you stayed until the job was done, even if that was six months working 12 hours a day. Burnout is high. Most divers don't last five years due to burnout or injury(ies). Your friend, at fifteen years is either very lucky, or very talented, or very burned. Repetitive decompression wreaks havoc on the body tissues. Please refer to dysbaric avascular necrosis in google. You just can't do it for long periods of time. Well, you can, but some people just have a higher pain threshold. It damages you for the rest of your life. I have a friend that lives in ******** City, Kansas, named Tony. He retired after about five years with Taylor/Brown and Root and 900' of water in the North Sea. He went back home and bought most of his little home town. Most divers are a pirate mentality, and end up with little or nothing. If you read this, Tony, the welder, get back to me. Steve, Ocean Corporation Class of Nov. 1974 Gulf of Mexico, 1974-1980 HOLY CRAP. THAT'S 31 YEARS AGO! -- Artful Bodger http://www.artfulbodger.net |
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