New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
For the last 20 years I've been told that machinists will be obsolete. I have tried in vain to explain why this is preposterous, but people sitting at desks are convinced that they know more about machining than I do. Machining has changed for sure. It's no longer repetitive 'button pushing', smoky, noisy work. Now it's computer programming, automation.
The whole Terrazzo style concrete trade. Forming, pouring, grinding, polishing etc.With the right color of aggregate and cements, can be be a very beautiful material. I've worked with some Italians who had it in every possibly place they could install it, in and around their homes.It's an excellent durable material, used to be the gold standard for flooring in hospitals, commercial buildings etc.Just not an affordable option anymore.
When I was a kid, my doctor had his office in a 10-story building with an elevator operator, a switchboard, and a letter drop from the top floor to the basement. While waiting for the elevator I could watch the outgoing mail fall in the glass-fronted chute from floor to floor.Another building in town (I forgot which one) had the clear pneumatic message tubes.
I was just telling someone (they were bemoaning a lack of jobs that aren't low-wage entry level service work or high-tech/high-education) they should watch 2 episodes of Madmen. The firm depicted had scores of secretaries, switchboard operators, elevator operators, copy editors, artists, mail clerks, coffee cart guys, etc etc etc supporting each ad executive and ad campaign. You cant conceive of a firm that size having more than a couple dozen employees now, instead of 300 or so.
Before i clicked on this thread, I wondered if there would just be a link to my website.....
Interesting story. My office had a desire to renovate the lobby to our offices which included a terrazzo floor. The contracting office had two contracts available. The first was with a technical contractor to assist with initial design, cost estimate and solicitation. The second was with two bidders to perform the actual construction. So for the deliverable for the first contract, the estimated cost was $18k, right in our budget of $20k. Then we got the bids from the construction solicitation and the bids were 5 times higher. That was the end of the whole deal.
That doesn't surprise me. It's extremely labor intensive. If done properly, with so many different stages to end up with a completely solid, smooth finish with the slurry and water involved for decent wet grinding, messy af.
One thing is certain...the oldest profession in the world will always be needed.
Just dont retire the skully cap Clint!But on the subject, I gotta believe there are folks doing stone carving with a 'cnc' type machine?
I own a public laundry facility.
Fond memories of the local laundry.....it was just around the corner from a (small town) strip club. Load up the washer, go have a beer, load up the dryer, go have a beer. The laundromat is still there - the dancing girls not.G
Used to go to a bar named Igor's in NOLA that had washing machines in the back for people like me with off-schedule hours. Washing clothes was no problem. After a beer or few & maybe some pool while waiting on the washers, having enough $$ left to pay for the dryers was. It was never any fun riding your bicycle a mile+ home in the dark with a laundry bag of 50+lbs of wet clothes balanced on the handlebars after that beer or few...
Steeplejack This guy Fred Dibnah was some thing of a BBC TV star in the early 80's. Fascination character. Have a look at about 26minutes into the linked video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wffv8YeoeeM