Played some bedroom bingo. Ate Mexican for lunch and went to the grocery store for Coke.
All that, and that an electrical engineering degree can also be put to use in aerospace. (And my degree being EE has nothing to do with that .) Once you have an engineering degree of whatever flavor, and you get a dream job in the aerospace business, what do you dream you're doing? Designing wings? Structures? Hydraulics? Integration of components into subsystems and subsystems into systems? I urge you to pick an engineering concentration based on that. I don't mean to knock AE, plenty of smart people do plenty of good work with AE degrees, but ME and EE are more portable and can get you an aerospace job just as well, or close to it.I don't want to rain on your parade, but consider mechanical engineering as well. There are lots of jobs in the aerospace industry that use a mechanical engineering degree, and it gives you some flexibility with non-aerospace jobs as well. Looking from the outside, it appeared that there were more new grad applicants than jobs available when my son was trying to find work in the aerospace industry. When he applied at non-aerospace jobs, the first question (if he even got an interview) was "How do we know you'll stick around and not bail for [Blue Origin or SpaceX or whatever] if a job comes available?"
Also, ordered some new running shoes as my latest pair of high cushion trainers (Adidas PrimeX Strung 2…version 1 was my favorite shoe ever and they completely ruined it in v2) had one of the internal plates snap after 10 miles, which left me training in race shoes. Those are fast, but are unforgiving and not something I can run multiple times every week in without pain.
What'd you get?
Asics Superblast 2 Paris. I hate super squashy shoes, I'm slow enough already, so I try to get a high stack shoe that still doesn't feel like running in sand....at 185 lbs it's a hard balance. Had the Nike Invincible Run 2 previously and a run in those was risking dying of boredom. The PrimeX Strung was the perfect leg sparing cushion shoe that still had some get up and go. They just wrecked it with the v2.
You might like the Adidas Takumi Sen as well, or even the Saucony Speed 3 or 4. The upper on the Takumi Sen is real minimal and not super comfortable, but it is a very lively shoe. I really like the Saucony Speed, the upper is more traditional and very comfortable. If shoes were cars, the Speed would be a Ford Crown Vic with a V8. My daily trainer is the Saucony Ride (like a well worn vanilla Toyota Corolla).
We also have a horse race tomorrowTomorrow is a public holiday, for a horse race (Melbourne Cup).
Looking better. Give it a good wire brushing before taking a picture and it'll look even better.Today’s weld of the day
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What surface prep are you doing before/after the weld? That surface looks contaminated enough that it would be really hard to get any kind of decent weld.Today’s weld of the day
View attachment 675732
I had a similar thought, then thought "There's no way he trying to weld it starting out that dirty and painted." Maybe next time take before and after pictures.What surface prep are you doing before/after the weld? That surface looks contaminated enough that it would be really hard to get any kind of decent weld.
Wow! What brand is that?Started to replace an outside light fixture. (Light bulb was very thick, heavy glass, may have been installed back when they built it around 1970.) Stopped when I realized that the labeling on the new fixture was reversed from the instructions. LIVE in the instruction was labeled NEUTRAL on the fixture, and vice versa. Contacted the company, waiting for instruction. *Not* exactly a trivial issue; will submit to CPSC.
It's Feit, bought at Menards. Connections at the fixture are poorly labeled. No green for ground screws, no red or black for hot. Just an almost unnoticed imprint of L and N on the black plastic. Jeeez....Wow! What brand is that?
Last weld of the day, the bell had just rung so I was hustling, I had only just got all the slag off.Looking better. Give it a good wire brushing before taking a picture and it'll look even better.
It was unpainted steel, I had only gave it a good scraping with the hammer.What surface prep are you doing before/after the weld? That surface looks contaminated enough that it would be really hard to get any kind of decent weld.
The light brown stuff is mostly fine slag particles from the welding, it’s a normal part of stick welding from my understanding, it sticks a little but it just scrapes off like dirt and it’ll come off by itself a bit to.I had a similar thought, then thought "There's no way he trying to weld it starting out that dirty and painted." Maybe next time take before and after pictures.
Actually, if you started with painted metal and got that weld, my hat's off to you on the weld per se, but not on the whole of the job.
Wow, that almost seems criminally negligent, it was mains voltage correct? If so that a fire or electrocution in the making!It's Feit, bought at Menards. Connections at the fixture are poorly labeled. No green for ground screws, no red or black for hot. Just an almost unnoticed imprint of L and N on the black plastic. Jeeez....
Yes, mains voltage. Contacted the company yesterday and nada. I just finished a report to the CPSC. Possibly I could have hooked it up and just had the breaker blown...but no thanks. As a chem prof I know literally hundreds of ways to injure or re-kit this body; don't need another one.Wow, that almost seems criminally negligent, it was mains voltage correct? If so that a fire or electrocution in the making!
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