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  4. Should the US govt bail out the American Auto Giants?

Should the US govt bail out the American Auto Giants?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Run Your Mouth
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  • ? This user is from outside of this forum
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    Guest
    wrote on last edited by
    #99

    capitlj;246945 wrote:
    I have always maintained that the UAW workers are grossly overpaid. 150k a year for a job that requires no experience or school WTF!!!!!!! I say no they will just have to figure it out for themselves and if that means they get swallowed up by Toyota or VW/audi so be it. That said I will still riot if, hypothetically, Ford gets taken over and the new management says no mustang or tries to take it in a new direction, aka probe.

    $150k/year in wages & benefits (and that is average wage...starting wages are around $28.12/hour as of 2007)...the high end is excessive IMHO, but part of that blame lies on the management of GM/Ford/Chrysler for not standing up to the unions and saying "either bring your wages down w/ the rest of the industry or we will hire from outside the union"...but none of them have the balls to say that either.

    The $28.12/hour is not unheard of, even locally, for non-union pipe-fitters (sprinkler fitters), I know of a good number making darn close to that that just started not too long ago in the industry...so the starting salary at the big 3 isn't completely insane, apparently those with more experience and more skilled labor get paid more and offset the difference?

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    • DaveHD Offline
      DaveHD Offline
      DaveH
      wrote on last edited by
      #100

      tjamz;246970 wrote:
      The $28.12/hour is not unheard of, even locally, for non-union pipe-fitters (sprinkler fitters), I know of a good number making darn close to that that just started not too long ago in the industry...so the starting salary at the big 3 isn't completely insane, apparently those with more experience and more skilled labor get paid more and offset the difference?

      There is a big difference IMO between a pipe fitter and a guy on the assembly line. Pipe fitters are skilled, and assembly line workers.... aren't.

      DaveH
      '94 Supra- 7.77 @ 176mph

      legacy image

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      • ? This user is from outside of this forum
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        Guest
        wrote on last edited by
        #101

        Have you ever talked to a pipe fitter Dave...seriously? They thread pipe and screw it together...not rocket science. Now the designers of sprinklers on the other hand...they do some serious thinking/calculating.

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        • StangerBanger96S Offline
          StangerBanger96S Offline
          StangerBanger96
          wrote on last edited by
          #102

          Ehh...nobody really does much thinking anymore because computers are pretty much able to do all that for you...

          For instance, a computer can figure out what the pressure at any point in a pneumatic system will be given certain conditions/intputs/outputs. It can figure out voltages anywhere in a circuit based on desired input/output voltages. It doesn't take much skill to figure that out.

          Sure there are certain instances where human ingenuity can help as far as tweaking certain system parts to sacrifice something here to make large gains there...but...overall computers can do it all.

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          • zbrownZ Offline
            zbrownZ Offline
            zbrown
            wrote on last edited by
            #103

            Starting at any position out here on the rigs is 26+/hr..... whether it be driving a water truck or just being someones bitch.....

            no skill required, just need the want to work

            rx7-8.89@157mph
            12v dodge, twins

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            • ? This user is from outside of this forum
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              Guest
              wrote on last edited by
              #104

              StangerBanger96;246984 wrote:
              Ehh...nobody really does much thinking anymore because computers are pretty much able to do all that for you...

              For instance, a computer can figure out what the pressure at any point in a pneumatic system will be given certain conditions/intputs/outputs. It can figure out voltages anywhere in a circuit based on desired input/output voltages. It doesn't take much skill to figure that out.

              At present, there are no programs out that will calculate properly for a foam system. There are no programs out that will autocalculate device counts for detection within a given room. There are none that will place sprinkler heads automatically. There are no programs that will autoconfigure a room to meet NFPA/NEC/IBC/IFC standards. If there were, I would own the damn thing already. You are involved in this industry Dustin, you should know as well as anyone the amount of time that goes into design/cad/engineering/bidding.

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              • ? This user is from outside of this forum
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                Guest
                wrote on last edited by
                #105

                zbrown;246986 wrote:
                Starting at any position out here on the rigs is 26+/hr..... whether it be driving a water truck or just being someones bitch.....

                no skill required, just need the want to work

                My point exactly.

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                • MisterCMKM Offline
                  MisterCMKM Offline
                  MisterCMK
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #106

                  tjamz;246997 wrote:
                  At present, there are no programs out that will calculate properly for a foam system. There are no programs out that will autocalculate device counts for detection within a given room. There are none that will place sprinkler heads automatically. There are no programs that will autoconfigure a room to meet NFPA/NEC/IBC/IFC standards. If there were, I would own the damn thing already. You are involved in this industry Dustin, you should know as well as anyone the amount of time that goes into design/cad/engineering/bidding.

                  Not to mention, you toss an AHJ into the mess...

                  FASTER THAN DUBBSY

                  > thrash;315544 wrote:
                  > I noticed that the new 5.0 valve covers say "Ford Motorsport" or something on them. Instead, the valvecovers should be a big bald eagle, holding a rifle in one talon, an american flag in the other, eating apple pie, and shitting on the outline of europe.
                  >
                  > Ford is back :)

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                  • ? This user is from outside of this forum
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                    Guest
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #107

                    MisterCMK;247000 wrote:
                    Not to mention, you toss an AHJ into the mess...

                    No doubt...there is no function of any program that has the ability to educate an AHJ about the errors of his ways.

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                    • DaveHD Offline
                      DaveHD Offline
                      DaveH
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #108

                      tjamz;246977 wrote:
                      Have you ever talked to a pipe fitter Dave...seriously? They thread pipe and screw it together...not rocket science. Now the designers of sprinklers on the other hand...they do some serious thinking/calculating.

                      LOL, yeah i've heard that about those sprinkler designers....

                      I have a good friend who is a pipe fitter, he does mostly mechanical systems and some of the stuff I've seen him do is pure artwork. Sure it's not brainwork like a sprinkler designer, :drunken_smilie: but it is a fairly highly skilled profession IMO.

                      DaveH
                      '94 Supra- 7.77 @ 176mph

                      legacy image

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                      • StangerBanger96S Offline
                        StangerBanger96S Offline
                        StangerBanger96
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #109

                        tjamz;246997 wrote:
                        At present, there are no programs out that will calculate properly for a foam system. There are no programs out that will autocalculate device counts for detection within a given room. There are none that will place sprinkler heads automatically. There are no programs that will autoconfigure a room to meet NFPA/NEC/IBC/IFC standards. If there were, I would own the damn thing already. You are involved in this industry Dustin, you should know as well as anyone the amount of time that goes into design/cad/engineering/bidding.

                        I guess my point more was to say...there are a lot of jobs people think are highly skilled that in fact are completed 90% by computers. I know there are various aspects of engineering and designing that absolutley require human ingenuity, but, there are also a lot of things that even ten years ago required a lot of thought and now only require 3 clicks of a mouse.

                        Give it ten years and that program you're wanting will be out 🙂

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                          Guest
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #110

                          StangerBanger96;247028 wrote:
                          I guess my point more was to say...there are a lot of jobs people think are highly skilled that in fact are completed 90% by computers. I know there are various aspects of engineering and designing that absolutley require human ingenuity, but, there are also a lot of things that even ten years ago required a lot of thought and now only require 3 clicks of a mouse.

                          Give it ten years and that program you're wanting will be out 🙂

                          I've been working on implementing something like what I described as a plug-in for auto-cad for a couple of years already....there's just too many variables when it comes to stuff like that. It would be nice though, then those damn engineers would finally put a system together properly.

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                          • T Offline
                            T Offline
                            thrash
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #111

                            sounds like a good market opportunity for a competant programmer.

                            what makes doing automatic sprinkler layout difficult? can code compliance be measured objectively? if so, would a dimensioned drawing contain enough information to verify code compliance? If a proposed layout meets all of the appropriate codes, is it a suffient layout? why or why not ?

                            i don't understand why the problem would be intractible to do in software. can you help explain it?

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