wrenchturner wrote:
So you haven't come across anything complicated YET?!?!!!!
Well you as a volunteer have either been given all the grunt work, cleaning panels, putting in a cotter pin here and a cotter pin
over there.
Or the only thing you have had the chance to voluteer to maintain was a "Piper Cub".
Every job I do is complex and challenging, peoples lives are at risk or stake because of the quality of work I do on a daily basis...
Secondary is my A&P license and the liability tied to it.
I can now understand the mentality of a "True" volunteer, you have a care free "LA DEE DA" attitude, heck your job is not on the line.
And that is why there is a differrance between volunteers who work on static/display aircraft and ones that fly.
Mehh..
Come up with something new will you? You're beginning to sound like a stuck record.
I jumped in at the deep end. I went to go work on an Avro Shackleton. Not really a Piper Cub. Rather interestingly, it is to be returned to flight, so bang goes your theory on static, flying, and volunteers. Not much would get done were you in charge I think...
The reason I haven't come across anything complicated is because I understand how the thing works. Cables, bearings, torque tubes, hydraulics.... don't bother me. Kind of helps when you've been playing with old cars for many years. The big V12s in the Shackleton aren't that scary when you were rebuilding Jag V12s when you were 15 years old. Complex? Yes. There's a lot of it. Complicated? No. The right tools and manuals solve that one. How you can claim that every job you do is challenging is beyond me.
As I stated, so long as I get the procedural side right... I'm fine. I can read, too, which helps me find the bit in the manuals I need to use. If I really screw up, I know how to work a forum too (including quoting people..) so I can find people who'll help. Hence my question ion the maintenance forum about how to clean the thing without damaging the skins. If I was really clueless I would have used something caustic and really screwed up; but asking questions yields results.
So despite everything, I don't have a "care free la dee dah" attittude, I just have a problem with those that seem to think that they were born in the position where they're at now. People who usually think they're too high up the food chain to do the grunt work, then whinge when it's not done. A bad attitude costs in time, money and occasionally lives depending on where you work; which is why I try to maintain a good temper. But, in your case I am beginning to struggle.
Here's a little information for you... just because you're a spanner monkey with a bit of a chip on his shoulder doesn't mean you're the only person in the world whose job has the responsibility of peoples lives depending on them. So don't get all judgemental on me until you know what I do for a living. Okay?
Regards,
Ric
(Volunteer and Proud - Avro Shackleton WR963)