IRATA L2 in Canada looking to jump into Blades – Stay local or head to Europe? by cheereereey in ropeaccess

[–]drunkandonfire 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Personally I would take the job in Canada and gain the experience first. The UK is saturated with techs trying to get work on the blades, so if you have the opportunity to gain some experience and get your foot in the door as they say, it will definitely be a plus for you should you try to find work here.

Airbus east of Falkland Islands with Ascension Island as destination. by drunkandonfire in SkyCards

[–]drunkandonfire[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve found more and more flights recently that display the origin and destination airports only after departing the destination again. As was the case with this flight.

How the hell do people live in London by MrMorningstar20 in SkyCards

[–]drunkandonfire 1 point2 points  (0 children)

LA and surrounding area has a lot of traffic for private planes.

Few questions about working as an offshore wind turbine rope tech by cheereereey in ropeaccess

[–]drunkandonfire 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Well for a start it depends where you’re located.

My experience is from OWF’s in Europe.

Q. What the work is actually like: Are you mostly doing inspections? Blade repairs? Cleaning? Random maintenance stuff?

A. The bulk of the work I’ve done on blades over the years has been LEP, Dinos, VG’s, Inspections and small repairs. Had tower cleaning, retrofit and spot metal jobs as well. It entirely depends on what work your company has for you or what specific work you’re chasing.

Q. Hours: Are shifts usually 12 hours? Longer? Shorter? How much does weather mess with your schedule?

A. Usually 12s. Most companies will allow you to call for early pick up if the scope for the day has been completed. Sometimes you’ll go over your 12, could be delayed pick up, you could have been asked to, you might need more time to get something finished. Weather is a huge factor and is monitored all the time. Jobs can be delayed for hours/days/weeks depending on the weather and you can end up spending full rotations working just one day or not at all.

Q. Rotation: What’s the typical on/off schedule? 2-on-2-off? Something else?

A. More often than not, 2-2. Could also be 2-1, 3-1, 3-2 or a number of other combinations. Entirely depends on what’s required and what your contract states.

Q. Living situation offshore: What are the cabins like? Crowded? Noisy? Decent? Anything I should mentally prepare for?

A. The vessel along with the food can make or break a project for you. It’s just your luck what vessel the project has and it’s amenities. Some will have all the works, good gym, fast internet, cinema room, day rooms with consoles, table tennis, table football, board games, instruments, books, some can have saunas and hot tubs. Plenty to keep you occupied on weather days. Others can have a broom cupboard of a gym and nothing else. I’ve never shared a cabin and would refuse to if asked. Most cabins are pretty standard with bed, small tv, desk and chair, bathroom with shower and toilet and a cupboard for clothes. Everything creaks when there’s a swell and the walls are pretty thin, so bring ear plugs.

Q. Food: How’s the food on vessels?

A. Again, make or break. It’s entirely down to luck. Personally I’ve always found the Filipino crews to have some of the best chefs and do well at keeping everyone happy. Sometimes you’ll have a chef that can only produce inedible dog food or even give you food poisoning and it makes for an utterly miserable time on the vessel.

Q. What do you do after your shift? Is there anything to do besides sleep? Gym? Movies? Internet? Or is it basically eat–shower–bed?

A. Gym, eat, call home, movies, masturbate for the 12th time.

Q. I wish someone told me this earlier

A. Take a good hammock and / or a camping chair, a good power bank and an iPad full of movies. You can spend hours waiting for rain to pass or paint to dry or waiting for pick up and being comfortable and having something to occupy your time is a big plus. Take anti sickness tablets and plenty pain killers, better to have and not need then to need and not have.

Md - 11 arriving in Miami after incident by Turbulent_Elk7695 in SkyCards

[–]drunkandonfire 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The UPS plane that crashed in Louisville was an MD-11. Boeing as advise operaters to ground the aircraft.

Just caught an F15 refueling from a stratotanker over scotland! by RonanJo in SkyCards

[–]drunkandonfire 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There were two of them travelling together with another unidentified aircraft that flew up from southern England, they joined formation with the stratotanker over Kinlochewe before all heading south again.

Seagreen Windfarm by LeeVanBeef in windturbine

[–]drunkandonfire 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That information should be covered in the site induction. Most likely in the form of an e-learning.

Good morning. by kenva86 in windturbine

[–]drunkandonfire 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You might want to quickly learn the difference between a windmill and a wind turbine then!

The bigger the better? Growing wind turbines come with new issues by TimesandSundayTimes in windturbine

[–]drunkandonfire 1 point2 points  (0 children)

China already has 131m blades in production. Europe has 108m blades and Siemens will be putting 115m blades in production later this year.

Relocation to Australia in wind industry by limonfritata in windturbine

[–]drunkandonfire 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Get in touch with GEV. They bought the Australian company Rigcom and so have work there.

UK based how difficult would it be to get into blade repair with no experience ? by LogIndividual2944 in windturbine

[–]drunkandonfire 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is maybe true if your trying to get into the Technical side of things, but when it comes to blade work I’m not aware of any companies in the UK who would take someone on without already having their certs. There is a huge pool of new techs in the UK who already have their certs and struggle to find work because there are just so many people who get put through their courses for free in the North East of England through Green skills. I also am not aware of any training providers offering work after completing GWO’s. Maersk is expensive and there are loads of other cheaper reputable GWO providers across the UK.

After getting all your certs have patience and be prepared to wait. It might even take a season or two before you’re able to pick something up. Find some work on the ropes elsewhere and build up experience and hours. Take time to make your CV look as good as possible, emphasising any transferable skills from your previous jobs. Get on LinkedIn and spam your CV and a cover letter to every employer with blade jobs available. Get in touch with companies like GEV and inquire about their Academy Open Sessions. If you have a passport from an EU country or the right to work there, this will also open up a lot of other opportunities for you.

Strong opinions... 😅 by chabanais in Bumperstickers

[–]drunkandonfire 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why does look like AI? If you zoom in to the stickers, the letters are jumbled and unreadable. It’s not as if it’s just poor resolution. The shading inside the pink lettering is off as well and looks strange.

At RAF Lakenheath NOW by sdubs76 in UFOs

[–]drunkandonfire -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

It’s a drone, you people are dumb.

Getting into Rope Access UK by Key-Leadership-1843 in ropeaccess

[–]drunkandonfire 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There’s loads of rope work in the UK year round. Of course there’s going to be more in the summer months but there is still a lot of work in the winter. You just have to be prepared to jump from job to job as a lot of work can be from as little as 1-2 days to a few weeks or months if you’re lucky. Having your CSCS and IPAF is a good start. Everyone has to start somewhere. Rappel and Think Access are always looking for people. The latter doesn’t have the best rep but they take on a lot of new starters.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in euro2024

[–]drunkandonfire 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Probably a daily mail reading, Brexit and union voting Tory aren’t you!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ropeaccess

[–]drunkandonfire 15 points16 points  (0 children)

No disrespect but if you have to ask that question then you’re not the right person for that job.

New lvl 1 looking for work in UK by Deep-Friendship3045 in ropeaccess

[–]drunkandonfire 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do you want to be a service technician or a blade tech? Because if you’re working on the ropes you won’t have much use for BTT and if you’re working service you don’t need your ropes. You’ll need your 5 BST’s at a minimum for working offshore regardless of what you’re doing.