Time for a change of pace


horst

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Some of you know Ive been in the construction business for a lot of years now, I started shingling when I was about 12 years old and kinda branched out into other fields, finally I was running my own business and doing all sorts of work in just about every aspect of residential construction and some commercial work.

Im 35 now and honestly Im getting burned out, I still enjoy the work but am tired of all the crap that goes along with it, customers that cant make up thier minds, trying to collect from people after jobs, companies losing my material orders, every thing seems to annoy me these days.

Last summer they started putting some wind turbines up outside of town here and I was honestly kinda facinated with the process.I half jokingly told my wife I wanted to go back to school and learn how to build them, eventually I even started looking into the classes.But with 3 kids and needing 2 incomes it never went any further, it just wasnt a good time to try it.

Last week I ran acrossed an ad in the local paper that caught my eye.A company in Ontario Canada that makes the blades for these things was looking for someone in my area to train as a technician to moniter and service the blades they use on the turbines in this area.

After debating with myself all weekend about it decided I would send a resume in yesterday and see what happened.Today i got an email back from the company, the lady that does the hiring will be in Iowa the 2nd week of next month and would like to meet with me and discuss the position.If things work out Ill be going to Ontario for a 6 week training course in how to work on them then starting a new job with the company.Im really hoping this works out, Im ready for a change of pace and working a couple hundred feet in the air everyday would definately be different:D

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You gotta do what you gotta do.Last year at this time,my life was a mess--needed some changes.Started out by quitting my job of 23yrs and starting over somewhere else.Had no idea what or where I was going but it all worked out in the end.Actually,it was one of the best decisions I ever made.Good luck--hope it works out for ya:)

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... we don't have enough wind around here to make them economically feasible.

You need to average (that's for 24x365) 11 miles per hour to turn a profit, but you probably don't want to put one up yourself. The small ones are 270 feet tall and cost approximately $1 million per unit and produce 1 megawatt. In comparison, a single nuclear plant will produce between 600 and 800 megawatts. Wind power is terribly inefficient, but because most state legislatures have mandated that power companies generate a certain percent from "green" sources (and nuclear typically doesn't count), there's an artificial market for wind energy. Ultimately, the taxpayers and the consumers end up paying for this ridiculous experiment.

BTW - Horst, don't get me wrong, I'm not dissing you for wanting or taking the job. There's nothing wrong with that at all. I just think we're (taxpayers and consumers) getting hosed by the environmentalists that are forcing this technology on us.

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BTW - Horst, don't get me wrong, I'm not dissing you for wanting or taking the job. There's nothing wrong with that at all. I just think we're (taxpayers and consumers) getting hosed by the environmentalists that are forcing this technology on us.

Dont worry about it Texan, I knew what you meant.And youre right, theyre not terribly efficient, from everything Ive read they can only convert about 50% of the winds power to electricity under ideal conditions.And theyre big, they take up a lot of land wherever they put them.

But theyre here, and I need a job and this one looks challenging enough to hold my attention:D

In the job description on thier websight it appears they dont use cranes to inspect the blades, everythings done from hanging scaffolds which Ive seen them use around here on several, you have to raise and lower yourself.And as you said, theyre high, several hundred feet in the air at least.Im not going to be pysically able to do things like this for to any more years in reality, might as well do it now while I can, then I wont have anything to regret later:cool:

Unless I fall, that would suck!!!

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BTW, what kind you considering putting on?

Not sure to tell ya the truth ... I haven't a clue about roofing that's why I won't tackle it myself... I'll let the Pro's do thier job, and I'll stick to retail .. ;)

I was actually looking into the Mueller, Inc Metal Roofing..

I really want the CF Panels ..

Here's what I was looking at ..

http://www.muellerinc.com/roofing/cfpanel.php

cfmedium.gif

This is to cover a straight forward 30' X 40' roof ,, NO valley's or dormers to work around .. ;)

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Never put that brand on before but it looks good, no exposed fasteners is definately the way to go.The stuff I used to put on was quite similiar but was Butler steel, same concept but you ran a seaming machine down the laps and actually rolled the two pieces together, never had one leak but it was pricey.

That stuff actually looks like it would go down pretty easy if you make sure the lapping edges get locked together and its a straight run as you say.

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Not sure to tell ya the truth ... I haven't a clue about roofing that's why I won't tackle it myself... I'll let the Pro's do thier job, and I'll stick to retail .. ;)

I was actually looking into the Mueller, Inc Metal Roofing..

I really want the CF Panels ..

Here's what I was looking at ..

http://www.muellerinc.com/roofing/cfpanel.php

cfmedium.gif

This is to cover a straight forward 30' X 40' roof ,, NO valley's or dormers to work around .. ;)

i have installed some just like that luke. not a bad product either. wish vermont was closer i would be glad to give ya a hand bud:D:D

good luck with the new job horst. i know where you are coming from. i am a contractor in iowa myself. hope it all works out for you and your family. you can always still bend a few nails on the side for extra cash and to scratch that carpentry itch. lol. then when you don't have to depend on it for a living you can be a little more picky choosing the jobs. LOL:D:D

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I won't be doing my roof Mike .. ;);) I'll leave that to the guy's that do it for a living... And I'll stick to what I do,, this way everything will be done right.. ;)

It's worth the extra dollars, to have it done right the first time .. :)

Chris, I was told that this roofing material is actually the cousin to standing seam,, the cost is just a touch cheaper ..:cool::)

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I won't be doing my roof Mike .. ;);) I'll leave that to the guy's that do it for a living... And I'll stick to what I do,, this way everything will be done right.. ;)

It's worth the extra dollars, to have it done right the first time .. :)

Chris, I was told that this roofing material is actually the cousin to standing seam,, the cost is just a touch cheaper ..:cool::)

it is the next best thing to standing seam luke. all consealed nails and easy to install. i have actually heard that same design called standing seam more than once

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It looks a lot like the stuff we put on commercially actually, the biggest difference I can see is actually in the accesories, the comercial stuff had a lot more stuff you had to put on, of course thats been 12 years since I did one of them and I sure things have changed a lot in that time.This also calls for a solid underlayment where the stuff we used was put on over steel framing.

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