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OLD DRAFTSMAN 4

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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.
 
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Chris
SolidWorks/PDMWorks 08 3.1
AutoCAD 08; CATIA V5
ctopher's home (updated Aug 5, 2008)
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SolidWorks Legion
 
CheckerRon, you didn't have dedicated tracers? We still had one at my place in the UK, well actually she was the receptionist now but her original job was tracing drawings in ink.

KENAT,

Have you reminded yourself of faq731-376 recently, or taken a look at posting policies:
 
CR*P! ...Now I do feel old. I know most the answer! ...Bummer :D-=-=-
 
A few of years ago I needed to find a place in San Antonio Texas to get some AutoCAD files printed full size. I went to the only place in the phone book. When I walked into that place (can't think of the name right now - American something) I felt like I had just stepped into the twilight zone. It must have been built in the 50's/60's and nothing had changed. It still smelled like ammonia and the sales case was still loaded with Staedtler-Mars, KOH-I-NOR and Bruning drafting equipment. The place was even really busy. I could see the big industrial printers and automatic paper folders working away. They did have a digital printer over in the corner, but, it wasn't bring used. That experience left me with the feeling that San Antonio was a little behind the times :) .


Tobin Sparks
 
We aren't necessarily behind the times, just slower to relegate the old to the trash bin of history while we take advantage of the new.
I wish you could remember the name, as I could really use some 3" triangles, and the regular office supply stores here have little to choose from.

"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]
 
Could it have been National Blue Print Co. Inc.?

"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]
 
OOPS! Didn't mean to offend anybody. You might be able to find triangles in a local museum :) . OOPS - I may have done it again :) .

Tobin Sparks
 
I still can't draw a straight line without one, and I have a lot of drawings to bleed on, so...

"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]
 
That is probably it then, just SSE of the airport. Claims to be the oldest full service blueprint company in town, opened in'69. I'm suprised there aren't any 100 year old companies like that around here ;-)

"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]
 
As Ken said a few dozen entries ago, I still see triangles, curves, templates and scales in Office Depot and OfficeMax, if you got one of those in your area. Also Art supply stores.

Paraphrase: "I love the smell of ammonia in the morning"

...least I "youst" to. Cleared the head. 'specially for the guys who came to work with a hangover.
 
My first job—Junior Drafter. Main duties: make coffee, service the blueprint machine, do drafting in between the first 2 important tasks.

Our blueprint machine was old and high capacity and didn't use bottles of aqueous ammonia—it used a 5 foot tall tank of gaseous ammonia to develop the prints. The first time I had to change it out I followed all the directions, closed the valve, unscrewed the coupling and proceeded to disengage it. Nobody thought it was important enough to mention that there was still a small qty of gas in the coupling which would puff out when the o-ring seal was broken. The bottle was big enough that I had to wrap my arms around it to lift it and that put face right near the coupling...

My eyes and nose took awhile to recover!
 
I've check at the Office Depot and OfficeMax, but the triangles that they offer start at 6", too large for my purposes (marking up B size prints). I've several of those and larger at home.
Have we wandered far enough off topic yet?

"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]
 
can you imagine the troubles if you had a 5 foot tall tank of gaseous ammonia at your desk now?

OSHA would be all over you
Fire department inspections
Where are your MSDS
Industrial hygienist
ISO inspectors would want to see that your gaseous ammonia training logs were up to date
shunning by all others
wierdo's coming up to you, hey man wazinnatank?

and you'd have to file your TPS reports weekly!
 
ewh:
A 6" triangle wouldn't be bad for marking B-sizes. I use an 8" orange 30/60 for that purpose.
My absolute faavs however for marking B-sizes are a matched pair of 4" high orange 45 and 30/60 triangles that I got years ago as freebees from a Ridgeway tool salesman. And yes, I have my initials carved on them.

Now this is definitely Old Draftsman talk---right on the OP topic.
 
I swear I had triangle that kind of size in my grade school math/geometry kit along with a protractor, a 6" rule and compass.

KENAT,

Have you reminded yourself of faq731-376 recently, or taken a look at posting policies:
 
My favorites, and what I am searching for, where a pair of 4" clear K&E triangles. Perfect size for what I need. 6" triangles do work, but I already have those and am trying to improve my tool kit.

"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]
 
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