Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations cowski on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

OLD DRAFTSMAN 4

Status
Not open for further replies.

Brandy7

Automotive
Apr 27, 2007
33
You know you are an old Draftsman when...

1. You know how to control line weights by rolling your pencil.

2. You know that a French curve isn't a grade change on a language
exam.

3. You've erased sepias with chemicals.

4. You've had a roll of toilet paper on your drafting board.

5. You remember when templates were plastic and not a type of
electronic file.

6. You know what sandpaper on a stick is for.

7. You know that a compass draws circles and not used to find the North
Pole.

8. You remember the head rush from the smell of ammonia.

9. You own a roll of masking tape so dried out, it will never be tape
again.

10. You've done cut and paste with scissors and sticky back.

11. You've etched your initials into your tools.

12. You have had a brush tied to your drafting board.

13. You've come home with black sleeves.

14. You've made hooks out of paper clips to attach to your lamp.

15. You know an eraser shield isn't a Norton program.

16. You've used "fixative" spray.

17. You've had a middle-finger callous harder than bone.

18. You have a permanent spine curvature from bending over your table.

19. You could smoke in the office

20. You could put the 'page 3' calendar up in a prime location with no
one complaining

21. There were a lot of 'cowboys' but now it's all Indians

22. You'd change jobs for an extra 25 cents

23. You'd be able to speak to the engineers in English

24. They'd be more than one way to sneak back into the office after
lunch

25. You learned to fold a drawing to get the title on the front

26. You also were accurate from 100 paces with an rubber band.

27. You got your check on Friday before lunch and didn't come back ?til
Monday!

28. There used to be contract work whenever you wanted it

29. The work week was 56 hours and you had to work 6 on Saturday to get
it.

30. You have draftsman elbow.

31. You extended your brush with a used cardboard tube.

32. You knew you were working on the original because it was Mylar.

33. The Boss would call from the Bar to lay people off.

34. Linen sheets were stolen to use as pillow cases....

35. You actually drew something without a computer.

36. A detailer wasn't waxing your car for $50 he was filling the tank
and getting it washed for you on the clock.

37. You know what onion skin is.

38. The runners worked at Tycoons on Eight Mile Rd. at night.

39. You moved to a new shop because it had Board-co.

40. You didn't need a resume.

41. You were interview at a bar, got a raise all at the bar at 2:00 in
the afternoon.

42. A Douche bag was not the guy in the next cube.

43. On Holiday weekends you wouldn't get paid on Friday until after
lunch.

44. You know that a scale isn't something in your bathroom to weigh
yourself....

45. You know that body rings aren't for piercing....

46. You've actually stayed at work all night to get a job done....

47. You know how to cut a section without a computer....

48. You actually know how to apply trigonometry....

49. You know that electric erasers actually do exist....

50. At one time you owned a mertz-o-matic....

51. You've been hired over the phone....

52. Tel-Way was a Saturday ritual (like white castle)

53. Papercuts didn't hurt

54 You could read someone's printing and knew who it was....

55. Programs you worked on in the past are now part of the Henry Ford
Museum !

56. GD&T was not used except at the Best Company's.
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Nah, doesn't have enough power. A mains one might though.

The Tip Ex does make the screen a bit of a mess though.

KENAT,

Have you reminded yourself of faq731-376 recently, or taken a look at posting policies:
 
In 1978, I took a new job as a pressure vessel/piping designer/checker in a small engineering Dept. and asked my curmugenly British Engineering manager for an electric eraser.
An hour later he dropped on my drawing board a brand new Pink Pearl eraser with two wires of a connecting cord and plug bored into it.

Next week he got me the real thing.









 
I took a few board drafting classes back in college in the late 90's. I can relate to more than I thought that I would. I never did any board work outside of college though, though I wish that I could have.
 
CheckerRon,
your <small engineering Dept...> with a <curmugenly British Engineering manager> reminds me of William (don't call me Bill) Dean. He is quite a character, not many good ones like him left :) .

Tobin Sparks
 
Tobin:
My crumugenly British boss had a gruff, stern exterior, but a good heart, as his electric eraser joke on the new guy showed.
He was Joe Lennon, but insisted on being called "Mister Lennon"---heavy on the Mister.
I kept that electrified Pink Pearl eraser for years after. I may still have it in one of my boxes of engineering stuff.
 
CheckerRon,
That's so funny. That sounds so much like MISTER Dean. Must have been part of there culture. Not that there is anything wrong with that :) .



Tobin Sparks
 
Most British Engineers, except some of the real analytical ones, think we're comic genius's. A lot of the older guys are real characters too. No offence but American Engineers just aren't as colorfull for the most part, at least from what I've seen.

KENAT,

Have you reminded yourself of faq731-376 recently, or taken a look at posting policies:
 
I'm not, yet. So I still get to make the Brit comments. Hopefully within the year though that will change.

KENAT,

Have you reminded yourself of faq731-376 recently, or taken a look at posting policies:
 
KENAT,
I totally agree. MISTER Dean used to get invited to travel around and speak at engineering conventions. He could get even the stuffiest old fuddy-duddy rolling on the ground laughing :) .



Tobin Sparks
 
Ctopher, for KENAT, I think that is no offence.
Are we of the subject yet?
 
Ammonia! I'll never forget opening large rolls of prints and collating them into packages. I remember ordering prints days in advance so I could leave them to air out in the open for at least a day.

Different colour print paper: one company I worked for used hot pink paper to denote internal check prints.

Back to back drafting boards, phoning your board neighbour to distract him.

Non-repro blue / purple leads. One old boy drafting manager forbid me to use them: "You're doing the same drawing twice!"

I recently saw a mechanical pencil with internal lead rolling mechanism.
 
"You're doing the same drawing twice!"

Not when you use them to guide your text!

"The ambassador and the general were briefing me on the - the vast majority of Iraqis want to live in a peaceful, free world. And we will find these people and we will bring them to justice." - [small]George Bush, Washington DC, 27 October, 2003[/small]
 
Colored pencils don't keep a good point, so I used a 4 or 5H lead to lay out my views. That manager probably wouldn't have liked that, either.

"The ambassador and the general were briefing me on the - the vast majority of Iraqis want to live in a peaceful, free world. And we will find these people and we will bring them to justice." - [small]George Bush, Washington DC, 27 October, 2003[/small]
 
I used plastic leads on mylar, loved that stuff.

"Art without engineering is dreaming; Engineering without art is calculating."

Have you read faq731-376 to make the best use of these Forums?
 
EWH,

I could never see the non-print blue lead because I used the blue grid vellum. So, I found that a very sharp, light pressured RED lead was very visible, but never printed.

Drove more than one manager nuts to see a complete drawing laid out in red, then done in H or 2H for the finished drawing. Laying the lead was like a plotter: all the workwas done, it just had to be darkened. It stopped a lot of smearing too.

And red looked so pretty!
 
Howdy,

We had our own ammonia blue print machine. Sometimes as I was watching the drawing feed the into the machine I would noticed a mistake - so I would try to tug it back out before it went all the way thru :) . That didn't happen very often though - Yeah :) .


Tobin Sparks
 
Regarding doing the same drawing twice.
In the early 70's I worked on a navy contract where all drawings had to be ink on mylar.
This required laying out the whole drawing, dimensions and all with a 6H or 9H pencil, then getting out your rapidograph pens and inking it all in. End result was beautiful.

This was because a big previous job of mylar drawigs with plastic lead failed 4th generation requirements and the Navy rejected ~40% of the drawings.
 
I almost past out once carrying ammonia 5-gallon containers to a blue-print machine. I sat it down a bit too hard, it splashed out a little. Enough to send fumes throughout the room.

Chris
SolidWorks/PDMWorks 08 3.1
AutoCAD 08; CATIA V5
ctopher's home (updated Aug 5, 2008)
ctopher's blog
SolidWorks Legion
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor