Well, I've seen other F22 bloggers lament the time spent on their day job. Guess it is my turn. Hard to get work done on the boat when you're spending 12 hrs a day away from the house. It always seems to be this way, feast or famine, for a small engineering automation company. Tomorrow I get to say hello to the floats and finish off the bow cap shapes and gunwale sanding.
Hooray!
Friday, October 26, 2007
Feast or Famine
Posted by GK at 6:15 PM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
I know what you mean. There will be better times (at least I keep telling myself that) ;-)
Hi Tor,
Our Canadian winter is starting to set in and everything is taking longer in my unheated garage. It's depressing when I see and hear about builders sprinting ahead on their main hulls. I just take it one step at a time, push as hard as I can, but refrain from rushing and sacrificing any build quality.
Hi Grant,
nice to know you are in automation, too ! I own a "micro" company (me and another) and we write software (SCADA, optimization, accounting system interfacing) in Delphi for Windows PC (no PLC) using OPC and modBus protocol. 12 ours/day are the norm when I'm on field, only 10 when in my office, where I often spend saturday morning.
Sorry for the OT, but I think it may be useful to know fellows' skills
Hi Biol,
I manage projects at Sterner Automation www.sternerautomation.com
My background is in applied laser physics and medical instrumentation, I managed to scam a physics PhD a few years ago.
If you are are interested, you can google-patents some of my old work by typing in Grant Kinsman.
Post a Comment