Goofs & Blunders You Should Avoid.

When you're mucking out stalls regularly, you wear your Levis tucked into your boots. Not a great idea when you're cutting with a torch. One of them little suckers fell into my boot and landed above my ankle. It was stall smoking when I got my boot off. The scar was visible for more than twenty years. I never tucked my Levis into my boots after that.
Working in the brewhouse, you learned to listen when coworkers suggested not tucking pants in your rubber boots. More than one had hot caustic water sprayed on them, and down into their boots. Eats and cooks the skin rather fast.
 
When you're mucking out stalls regularly, you wear your Levis tucked into your boots. Not a great idea when you're cutting with a torch. One of them little suckers fell into my boot and landed above my ankle. It was stall smoking when I got my boot off. The scar was visible for more than twenty years. I never tucked my Levis into my boots after that.
Cleaned a bunch of stalls every day for years and never felt the need to do that. Neither did any of my employees.


Different parts of the country definitely do things differently.

Now if you are from Wyoming and have sheep.....
 
Cleaned a bunch of stalls every day for years and never felt the need to do that. Neither did any of my employees.


Different parts of the country definitely do things differently.

Now if you are from Wyoming and have sheep.....
With the Levis outside the boots, anything over ankle deep makes for dirty Levis. The same with dealing with snow and slush in the winter and mud in the spring, summer, and fall. It was easier to clean a pair of boots than my jeans so it just became a habit. Wearing your fatigues outside your boots meant you were out of uniform and that also may have had some influence as I still wore my old army boots for years afterward.

Nowadays, with no more mucking, the only time I wear my jeans tucked in my boots is when dealing with mud or snow. I definitely don't want them tucked in while I'm at the lathe or the mill.
 
Don’t!

Do not!

“Do never….ever” run the die when the grumpy toolmaker has told you not to.

Don’t matter if you’re management or the plant manager.

You need legacy product?

You’re not getting it anytime soon.


Why are you so grumpy all the time, you should chill out……..


ETA: it takes about a full day to pull this die as it’s almost 10’x10’ and over 10,000lbs, and the shoe under this steel is caved in worse than I have ever seen it.

But we only needed 600 parts…….. we thought it would be OK……..

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**** me running!

I’m getting bombarded here.

New hire took twice as long as necessary to make some simple die steels, then put them in the oven without tool wrap.

FML


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Welding overhead under the car, a big fat cherry dropped onto my welding jacket, rolled down the "slight swell" of my stomach, found the gap at the bottom. It went from below the belly button to my belt, and sat there burning like hell. The lesson is, don't lift the belt, it rolled farther south, burning a swath as it rolled, and you can't just sit up under the car....:eek 2:
and you can't just sit up under the car....

But you sure can try:bang head:
 
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