Tag Archive - professional

I Went Tool Shopping

Tool Shopping

Tool Shopping

As I begin to write this post, I am freaking cold man!  I went into work early last night, wearing shorts, and by the morning the temp had dropped from the 70s to the 50s.  Yes, this may sound a bit whinny for me after I just spent five years living in North Dakota, but I am a Floridian through and through which means that even at 50 degrees I am cold.

So, no that I have some long pants and a hoodie on, I will continue.

I was supposed to provide a deposition yesterday at a local court reporters as part of an upcoming trail I am a witness in.  I witnessed an assault earlier this year and now have been subpoenaed to testify on behave of the State and Circle K as to what I saw.  The defense consul wanted a deposition from me, but when I showed up to the court reporters, I found out that the lawyer involved with the case has the swine flu.  I don’t know yet when this will be rescheduled, but I am sure it will happen at the worst time.

Since I had extra time to kill yesterday, I decided to go “pre tool shopping.”  With my new job comes the responsibility of providing most of my own tools.  I will need a lot of “common tools”; wrenches, screwdrivers, pliers, etc.  As a sheet metal technician in the aviation industry, there are a lot of specialty tools I will have to gather up as well.  I am going to be getting a nice new rivet gun, drill, grinder, hammers, and other tools that would seem special to the lam-in, but are very common and essential to me.

That brought me to my local Sears.  Their line of Craftsman Tools will meet just about all my needs.  I walked up and down every tool isle deciding and recording every tool I think I will need that they have available for purchase.  After scrutinizing each isle, I ended up with a list that tops $2400.00.  Mind you, that is just an estimate.  When all is said and done, I am sure the final cost will be closer to $4000.00.  Good tools are expensive and even though Sears has most of what I need, there are a good deal of tools they do not have, which I will more than likely find on the internet.

My quest to build my tool box is well under way.  I already have a rather large set of mechanics tools, which will give me a nice start.  Once I secure some funding, I will get what I would consider the essentials to round out the beginnings of my tool box.  I figure it will take me the better part of a year to fill up my tool box to have have everything I need.

Looks like I will be developing my own relationship with Sears, the Snap On guy, and the Mac Tools man.  I wonder if any of them are on Twitter or Facebook?

If you’re interested in learning more about the tools of my trade, or if you’re just really board, here are some links to some of the places where I will be buying my tools.  Enjoy.

Aviation Tool Supply

http://www.aircraft-tool.com/shop/main.aspx

Sky Geek

http://www.skygeek.com/tools.html

Brown Tool

http://www.browntool.com/


First Job Fair Provides Opportunities

The Job Hunt

The Job Hunt

Finding a new job these days has proven to be a difficult task.  Aside from finding the time between my current job, current projects, and life in general to search for a job, there just aren’t many prospects out there.  For myself, I am looking for an opportunity in the aerospace industry.  I live in Pensacola, Florida, the home of Naval Aviation and the Navy’s Blue Angels.  We have a moderately sized airport, and plenty of small fields scattered throughout town.  The problem, however, is that there just isn’t any new jobs opening up very often that I am qualified for.  Because of this, I have begun to look outside of Pensacola. While I am still searching for a career path that keeps me home, I am open to a bit of a commute if the salary is commensurate to the daily drive.  This, and a tip from a friend, is what led me to attending the Panhandle Job Fair this past week in Fort Walton Beach, Florida.

The job fair was only about the size of a high school gym, but it was packed with plenty of aerospace companies for me to choose from.  Among them, L3 Communications, Lockheed Martin, and BAE Systems.  The companies that I was most drawn to where Mobile Aerospace Engineering and Goodrich.  The services that these two companies provide to the aerospace community mirror the skill set on my resume.

Thanks to the job fair, I am now researching the opportunities available at MAE and Goodrich.  MAE, based and operated out of Mobile, Alabama, provides Periodic Phased Inspections and Maintenance on heavy jets including Boeing 747s.  They also perform major modifications to aircraft such as converting passenger jets into cargo jets for companies such as FedEx.  I have five years experience performing Phase Maintenance on heavy bombers thanks to the United States Air Force.  I understand the ebb and flow of a maintenance cycle, and I understand the attention to detail and commitment to high standards that work of this magnitude requires.  After talking with the MAE representative at the job fair, I am confident that I would be able to slide right into a comfortable, familiar atmosphere where I could really shine and possibly create a long term career home.  The only downside would be the commute from Pensacola everyday.  With the estimated salary however, I feel as though this can be overlooked.

The other company is Goodrich.  They have facilities in a number of locations, including Foley, Alabama.  Foley is a much shorter commute for me, and the job itself is still right up my alley.  Goodrich Foley assembles and maintains aircraft pylons and nacelles.  Looking at my resume, you would find that the majority of my experience is in nacelle maintenance.  The B-52H Bomber has four pods (pylons), each supporting two engines.  Each engine is covered by six segments of nacelle structure called cowling.  All totaled, that makes 40 separate pieces of structure per aircraft that requires inspection and repair every 450 flight hours.  Multiply that by 12 or more aircraft phases a year, and you can see how I have accumulated a lot of experience in nacelle maintenance over the past five years.  At this company I would most likely assemble brand new nacelle structures for various airframes.  Being able to create something with my hands and skills out of nothing, and getting payed well for it is a great prospect.

I plan on following up with at least MAE and Goodrich this coming week, and possibly looking into some of the other companies showcased at the job fair.  This was my first job fair, and I wish was able to have stayed for the many workshops that they had to offer.  Even without the workshops, this experience was very beneficial to me attaining my goal of continuing my career in the aerospace industry.

What would you do in my situation?  Could you handle a long daily commute?  Would you leave home for a job?  Share you thoughts with me.  Comment bellow, or send me a message on any of the social networks I am a member of.  Thanks for reading!

Launch: tweets.DanielVining.com

rocket_small

New Website Launch!

I am excited to announce the launching of a new sub site to DanielVining.com today.  tweets.DanielVining.com is now live and running smoothly thanks to the WordPress platform and a couple of great plugins.

The premiss of the site is simple.  I wanted to create a place where I could store all my Twitter posts for archiving.  I searched for a tool or site that could do this for me, but didn’t come up with much.  Then I thought, “How hard would it be to create my own pseudo-Twitter site? Not a clone, but more of a dump.”  The answer came thanks to the WordPress theme P2.  P2 is meant to be the WordPress solution to hosting your own Twitter clone site.  In order to get my tweets to the new site, I am using a plugin called Twitter Tools.  The settings on this plugin allow me to send my tweets to my blog, with each new tweet showing up as a new blog post.  Combine that with the look and feel of the theme, and you get your own personal twitter archive.  Now, I can simply back up my blog, which in turn backs up my tweets as well.

"tweets.DanielVining.com"

"tweets.DanielVining.com"

This website is not meant for mass population.  I am the only contributor, and a wealth of traffic is not expected nor truly wanted.  If, however, you are wanting to learn how you can too back up your tweets, I hope that this site can serve as an example.

The whole point of tweets.DanielVining.com is to back up the tweets from my Twitter stream, which can be found at twitter.com/danielvining.  Check me out, follow me, and keep reading!


Installed Kodak ESP 3 today

I installed a new printer on my Macbook today. It is a Kodak ESP 3 All-in-One. Seems like a nice, get the job done printer. I will be scanning old family photos and printing new digital prints with it in the coming weeks. Maybe a review is in order.

This new installation is courtesy of my Mom. She desperately needed a new printer to replace the craptastic one she is currently using. It is an HP (the model name eludes me) and is a piece of junk. So we got the Kodak. I already had my own HP printer that works great. Mom decided that she wanted mine, so I will be installing that one on her PC in the next day or so. As a result, I get the Kodak. Works for me so long as the printer does its job.
I don’t do a ton of printing these days. Anything too fancy I take to the photo lab or print store. Mostly, I print webpages, resumes, emails, and ToS agreements. My family photos project should run the gambit of the capabilities of this new printer, and I look forward to shorting through the options on both the hardware and software.

New Addiction: Facebook

Well, try as I might, I could not help but to fall into the massive void that is Facebook.  I know, I know.  I am very late in the game, yet that doesn’t change the fact that I am now addicted to this service.  

I was an early adopter to Myspace, Facebook’s rival in the social networking game, back in 2005.  Within my Myspace profile, I grew a better understanding of HTML, got my fix on adding as many friends as I could, and kept in touch with friends in both my hometown of Pensacola, FL  and the place that I called home for five years, Minot, ND.  As 2005 drew into 2006, and 2007, I became a bit over saturated by Myspace.  By 2008 it had become the place where I would watch people continue on with their lives, while at the same time I started to respond less and less.  I was tired of Myspace.

Jump to now, 2009, and I have found new life in social networking, through Facebook.  It started with wanting to create a more professional social net presence that I felt Myspace could not provide.  Facebook for me has begun to overtake Myspace as my number one most visited site thus far this year.  I keep a Facebook page open all the time, and constantly check my email to see if there are any new updates.  Never a big fan of Myspace Apps, I don’t see myself changing that on Facebook.  There do seem to be more apps that truly cater to networking.  Although I don’t like how hard it can be to find new friends on Facebook, I feel that overall the user experience on this social network is safer.  

I don’t know if this new “addiction” will last as long as Myspace did, but I do know that I am enjoying this service now.  It is a huge tool that has let me reconnect with a ton of old friends, and expand into new relationships in both my personal and professional life.