The Construction Thread

Is that a house, a tent, or an igloo? :)

That's what the fucking Brits brought for a 'shelter'. When I pointed out the two big blonde/brown things wandering about on the tundra on the horizon, it was replaced by a Chevy Suburban up on the pad.
 
That's what the fucking Brits brought for a 'shelter'. When I pointed out the two big blonde/brown things wandering about on the tundra on the horizon, it was replaced by a Chevy Suburban up on the pad.

I have seen their crap work before. No tent, just excuses.
 
I was sent an interesting PM the other day regarding contractors and licensing. It wasn't very polite or very nice (not a regular). So I'm listing which Licenses I have and what else I do in the building industry:

State of California.

Gen. Building B.
Gen. Engineering A. (inactive)
Plumbing C-36
Electrical C-10 (inactive)
Water conditioning C-55 (inactive)
HVAC C-20 (inactive)
Solar C-46 (inactive)

Montana.

Master Plumber (inactive)

Nevada.

Gen. Contractor (inactive)

Canada.*

Heating, Cooling & Gas Installation (inactive)
Gen. Construction (inactive)

faq.
Why do you have so many licenses? Until home depot sued and won the case against the state of California You had to cover three fazes of construction or have a specialty license.
Why are so many inactive? It cost a bloody fortune to have a license! My company is me so every license cost between $6,000-12,000 per year extra in coverage. Do the math.

I am a member of IAPMO.

I helped co-author the residential ADA code of wheelchair accessible bathrooms.
I also helped co-author the multi inspector examination, so you have an inspector who actually knows what they are looking for.
Both of these are in use in the US. today.

* I did the plumbing at 26 Quizno's sandwich shops in Canada.

Thanks for clearing this up.
 
Now that's what I'm talking about.

What do all the pipes do?

The little beige houses on the right cover each wellhead. The structure to the left is the piperack. The larger insulated lines between the rig mats are flowlines from the wells. The funny finned things are part of the refrigeration system to keep the ground frozen.
 
I was sent an interesting PM the other day regarding contractors and licensing. It wasn't very polite or very nice (not a regular). So I'm listing which Licenses I have and what else I do in the building industry:

State of California.

Gen. Building B.
Gen. Engineering A. (inactive)
Plumbing C-36
Electrical C-10 (inactive)
Water conditioning C-55 (inactive)
HVAC C-20 (inactive)
Solar C-46 (inactive)

Montana.

Master Plumber (inactive)

Nevada.

Gen. Contractor (inactive)

Canada.*

Heating, Cooling & Gas Installation (inactive)
Gen. Construction (inactive)

faq.
Why do you have so many licenses? Until home depot sued and won the case against the state of California You had to cover three fazes of construction or have a specialty license.
Why are so many inactive? It cost a bloody fortune to have a license! My company is me so every license cost between $6,000-12,000 per year extra in coverage. Do the math.

I am a member of IAPMO.

I helped co-author the residential ADA code of wheelchair accessible bathrooms.
I also helped co-author the multi inspector examination, so you have an inspector who actually knows what they are looking for.
Both of these are in use in the US. today.

* I did the plumbing at 26 Quizno's sandwich shops in Canada.

Thanks for clearing this up.

Pick a fucking trade, would ya? :)
 
The little beige houses on the right cover each wellhead. The structure to the left is the piperack. The larger insulated lines between the rig mats are flowlines from the wells. The funny finned things are part of the refrigeration system to keep the ground frozen.

Is the derrick on rails or something?
 
I've been meaning to recommend this book here for a while, it's one of my all-time favourites, I've read it about 4 times. It's about an Italian guy whose trade is translated from Italian as "rigger", but he seems to be somewhere between a millwright and an ironworker. It's his weird tales, as told to Primo Levi, of travelling to jobs all over the world. You guys would love it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wrench
 
I'm a cranespotter on Skyscrapercity. I worked in a cement factory for two years.


Eh, I got nothing.
 
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