Originally posted by racrguy
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Random PICTURE of the day thread *KEEP IT WORK SAFE*
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Originally posted by John Galt View PostIts not that hard....but having the right equipment, software, and know-how to communicate is priceless. I have paid Rockwell and Siemens reps $220/hr + travel + 4 hr minimum to look at issues. If you have the technical ability it can be a very lucrative field.Originally posted by Cooter View PostGood money in drives. Study hard and enjoy the oil fieldOriginally posted by John Galt View PostLike I said, a real man would have tried it.....from a bunker
Coots, we have oilfield guys come recruit a lot. especially for offshore. Today a company said instrument techs start at $80-90K for offshore. Christ thats alot. I think I'm going a different route for considerably less cash though.DE OPPRESSO LIBER
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one of my fav's
Originally posted by Taya Kyle, American GunThere comes a time when honest debate, serious diplomatic efforts, and logical arguments have been exhausted and only men and women willing to take up arms against evil will suffice to save the freedom of a nation or continent.
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Originally posted by Taya Kyle, American GunThere comes a time when honest debate, serious diplomatic efforts, and logical arguments have been exhausted and only men and women willing to take up arms against evil will suffice to save the freedom of a nation or continent.
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We took a motor to 14,000rpm before, good thing we had it in a room made to withstand explosions.
We are seeing more AC/DC drives in the oilfield and with everyone going to electric controls on the hydraulics there will only be more demand for those jobs. I think the standard rate for programming right now is around $120-140/hr
I have seen every part of the Ospreys but have never seen one put together. Those are some bad aircrafts. They are soon going to be available to the public.
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