Sometimes in our senior years..we start reminiscing, considering our "old days" and the friendships and experiences we shared with co-workers.
This morning in reverie, I travelled back to my days working high steel. My part was not assembling the pieces, but painting them, sand blasting
same when needed.
Much of the structures, oil tanks etc., were prime coated with red lead paint. In Texas and Louisiana, we sprayed the red lead, but in
New york State, we could only apply red lead with a brush.
I worked on offshore drilling rigs..I believe for Haliburton, but I worked on them as they were built onshore. They require sandblasting "to white"..
but no red lead. Instead carbo-zinc primer with a 3 part epoxy was applied.
One memory I have, is a stern "chewing-out" I underwent was inthe Gulf Refinery. We used to bring thinners in a separate can... in this case,
we (my crew) happened to show up with 5 gallons of 50/50 r5educer... in a TEXACO can! An apparent supervisor there took us to task for that !
To assuage his concern, i told one of the guys toturn his sprayer (with primer) on the can..
Below, a photo from the web,showing this type work. I rarely worked over a couple hundred feet, but we knew full well that a fall from anything
over 80 feet, was normally fatal...or at least bad enough so one may as well be dead.
The worker shown is walking a 6" beam.. we ofte walked as small as 2" beams. Brush painting horizontal beams, was a task, because we had to
"coon" the beams, which simply means crawling along the beams, while painting them.... in reverse gear, naturally.
Do you have any reminisces to share.