centralsweeper63
Well-known member
Ah yeah, sounds good. A Vacuflo 760 or 960 would be pretty sweet.
I will have over 200 vacuums in that garage. I won't need a central vac.Ah yeah, sounds good. A Vacuflo 760 or 960 would be pretty sweet.
That is what the 16 gallon Rigid shop vac is for.Oh, okay. I thought it might be good to have for sucking up dirt from within machines. I find a big bin that is bagless very, very helpful.
Thanks again for the compliments, Paul! Actually, I took up Printing as a hobby before it became a career. I had been laid off from the first Printing company I had worked at, and was working at Galion Iron Works, a company that built road graders, cranes, and rollers at the time I started the Printing hobby, thinking that I would be working there the rest of my life, and if I couldn't work in Printing I could pursue it as a hobby. Ended up being laid off from there after 6 years in 1981, on the day before Lena and I got married. It was about 5 years later that I got back into Printing and made a career out of it.You're most welcome, Jeff!
A career that becomes a hobby sounds awesome!
My churches had United/Lifetouch pictorial directories made but only with the glossy heavier-weight paper covers; the leatherette covers would be great to have for anniversary editions!
Thanks for the photos of you at the Heidelberg press and of your C & P handled press—how cool!
And thank God for back doors—good for you!![]()
You have had an interesting working life. I still picture you pushing refrigerator and washing machine parts around and my mind still has a hard time getting used to the idea of a five story factory.Thanks again for the compliments, Paul! Actually, I took up Printing as a hobby before it became a career. I had been laid off from the first Printing company I had worked at, and was working at Galion Iron Works, a company that built road graders, cranes, and rollers at the time I started the Printing hobby, thinking that I would be working there the rest of my life, and if I couldn't work in Printing I could pursue it as a hobby. Ended up being laid off from there after 6 years in 1981, on the day before Lena and I got married. It was about 5 years later that I got back into Printing and made a career out of it.
And yes, the leatherette covers were often ordered by the churches for Anniversary or other commemorative editions. I also ran the folder, so even if I didn't print the cover for your books I might have folded the inside pages. Also, for several years we offered pocket folder covers which were similar to the 4-color glossy covers except that they had a pocket flap inside. I also ran the die-cutting press that cut the flaps. It was also a Heidelberg and looked somewhat similar to the press I'm running in the picture, except that instead of having 3 cylinders, it had one cylinder that the bed that held the die went back & forth underneath.
Jeff
You're welcome, Jeff!Thanks again for the compliments, Paul! Actually, I took up Printing as a hobby before it became a career. I had been laid off from the first Printing company I had worked at, and was working at Galion Iron Works, a company that built road graders, cranes, and rollers at the time I started the Printing hobby, thinking that I would be working there the rest of my life, and if I couldn't work in Printing I could pursue it as a hobby. Ended up being laid off from there after 6 years in 1981, on the day before Lena and I got married. It was about 5 years later that I got back into Printing and made a career out of it.
And yes, the leatherette covers were often ordered by the churches for Anniversary or other commemorative editions. I also ran the folder, so even if I didn't print the cover for your books I might have folded the inside pages. Also, for several years we offered pocket folder covers which were similar to the 4-color glossy covers except that they had a pocket flap inside. I also ran the die-cutting press that cut the flaps. It was also a Heidelberg and looked somewhat similar to the press I'm running in the picture, except that instead of having 3 cylinders, it had one cylinder that the bed that held the die went back & forth underneath.
Jeff
Being out of a job at age 53 is tough. HR weenies only want to hire young and pretty. They don't even consider us old gray beards. Even being in your 40s age is working against you. "Oh, you're over qualified". In my case looking for a new career in my 40s I only had a Masters degree and most of the places I applied for had scores of out of work PhDs applying. I eventually ended up working for the Navy at one of their big weapons labs. That was mostly a good job and I had the opportunity to have a front row seat on the development of some really out there weapons but there is a lot of nepotism and bigotry in the civilian side of the Navy along with some outright dishonesty that can be frustrating to deal with.Thank you, Paul, Cheesewonton, and Eliot, for the compliments! It definitely has been an interesting life. Wonderful or terrific might be pushing it a bit, as it has definitely had its ups & downs. For example, when I worked at Westinghouse, I hired in during my first layoff from Galion Iron Works but was laid off from Westinghouse 6 months later. Fortunately, about 2 weeks after Westinghouse laid me off, I got called back to the Iron Works. But when I got laid off from the Iron Works again the day before our Wedding, it wasn't exactly the ideal way to start a marriage, but in almost 45 years we've definitely seen all of the better & worse, richer & poorer, in sickness & health aspects, and we're still together!
Later, when I got laid off at age 53 from United Church Directories/Lifetouch along with 25 co-workers due to the Printshop being shut down after working there for 22 years (they moved our jobs to another plant out of state), it was an enlightening experience to say the least. First, I realized that being middle aged meant too young to retire and too old to start over. And when I updated, or actually, rewrote my resume, it was a real eye opener! Most of my former employers were out of business, the college where I earned my degrees no longer existed, and most of my personal references had passed away.
So yes, although life has had its ups & downs, it has mostly been good.
Jeff
I retired on January 31st, the same week the first of Elon Musk's "fork in the road" emails came out. I started the retirement process after the election. I knew chaos was coming and wanted no part of what I knew would be a complete sh_t show. I still talk for my former team mates and they are all hating life. I wanted to stay a couple of more years until I turned 70 but I know I made the right decision to leave when I did.Good to hear you got a job, bad to hear it had some bad aspects. Every good has a bad though.
I have no doubt she will regain her clearance. We hired one of the top law firms in that area of law and we can disprove every claim the Navy made. But it will take time and money. We have another process going on with their EEO office. We know that will get us nowhere because we are demanding back wages, attorneys fees and damages which we assume the Navy will deny, but failing out of the EEO process allows us to sue in Federal court.Ooh, that is a sad story. It will get better though. Unless, oh, wait, Trump.
Yes it was tough. Didn't land a job until about a month after my unemployment ran out, and it turned out to be the worst job I've ever had in my life! It was a temp position at a Japanese-owned company called Cardington Yutaka Technologies, that made catalytic converters, torque converters, and exhaust systems for Honda. It was physically demanding, labor intensive, and I lost 30 lbs. in the 8 months that I worked there. Most of that time I ran 3 robotic welders and was literally running between the 3 cells to keep them loaded. After the tsunami hit Japan in 2011 and we were wondering how that would affect our jobs, I got a call from the production manager at Express Publishing & Printing in Mansfield, OH, asking if I was still interested in working with them and if I could come in for an interview. Although I had just gotten home from work and was still in my dirty uniform and work boots, I told him I'd be there in 20 minutes. I got hired, and on my last day at Yutaka the following Friday, they announced that they were cutting down to a 3 day a week work schedule due to the tsunami. Found out later that the following Wednesday they let all the temps go, so if I hadn't left Yutaka to go to Express, I would have been unemployed again! I have no doubt that "the man upstairs" was watching out for me there--the timing was too perfect for it to have been a coincidence! Unfortunately, as much as I enjoyed the job at Express, it only lasted 3 1/2 years, then the out of state owner closed it down.Being out of a job at age 53 is tough. HR weenies only want to hire young and pretty. They don't even consider us old gray beards. Even being in your 40s age is working against you. "Oh, you're over qualified". In my case looking for a new career in my 40s I only had a Masters degree and most of the places I applied for had scores of out of work PhDs applying. I eventually ended up working for the Navy at one of their big weapons labs. That was mostly a good job and I had the opportunity to have a front row seat on the development of some really out there weapons but there is a lot of nepotism and bigotry in the civilian side of the Navy along with some outright dishonesty that can be frustrating to deal with.