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There will be NO dismantling of our security system here, Peeps! You just stick to your coop building.
That project is both useful, and aesthetically pleasing.


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I do.... self taught Manufacturing engineer here.... Dad worked at area 51... He was always tinkering in his lab which was the spare bedroom... Next to mine. He was self taught too.... His specialty was high speed machines... One of the first to automate Contact lens manufacture. Me... I make things better easier to build with fewer parts.
I will be cobbling up stuff out of the refuse bin.... tuning the TV to get better reception.... the math I know... where to look it up if I need it Machinerys guide was my bible... That and McMaster Carr.
deb "Who designed her chicken coop in Solidworks..."
He played the victim in an old 1998 or so "Midsommer Murders" segment. Brown hair. Maybe 20. Not much yet.Oh cheese and crackers! I forgot Orlando Bloom.... Wow that guys pretty. For some reason I really like him as the elf Legolas in lord of the rings![]()
He rides a horse perchie.girl![]()
Yes, definitely in the genes. Unfortunately, I didn't get those. I DO know what a hammer looks like.Thanks. Truth be told, though, I think engineering is in the genes. Grandpa was a high-level civil engineer who designed the S.F. Bay Bridge and assorted tunnels into Yosemite...He almost was assigned Hoover Dam, but opted to reside in the S.F. Bay Area instead (I think Grandma in her way convinced him that she didn't want to raise 4 youngsters in Las Vegas with no air conditioning). And those genes filtered down... Uncle Bruce worked in Los Alamos on the bomb and later was a designer electrician for Westinghouse (creating the lights used in movie productions); Uncle Bob designed beautiful garden landscapes, my dad designed business forms (back before they were all templates on computers). And assorted cousins got the engineering affliction: One now works at Los Alamos in chemical engineering, one designs for Tesla, and I wake up doing geometry equations in my head. Can't explain it, really. But building stuff, I've found, is just a whole lot of math (angles) and a little bit of art...and maybe some attention to detail.