View allAll Photos Tagged EquipmentOperator
Giving love, or rather, concrete, is the highest pleasure, receiving it back is a true treasure. With your boots on the floor, share this with a coworker or someone you adore. #HeavyEquipment #Construction #SkilledTrades #BigRig #Demolition #Mood #ConstructionTrades #RockTruck #Concrete #Careers #EquipmentOperator #HeavyDuty #Excavator #ConstructingHistory #mgicorp YouTube Link: youtu.be/4DYW8Uha0ho
Planting Trees and Shrubs at Gorst Creek in Port Orchard, WA. Photographed with a Leica IIIc with a Summitar 5cm f/2 lens. The film is Ilford Pan-F 50+ developed in Beerenol (Beer).
www.kitsapsun.com/story/news/2017/10/07/gorst-creek-rebor...
Equipment Operator 3rd Class Zachary Darrow, assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 3, uses a cement drill during a construction project in Vatubou, Timor-Leste, July 27, 2017. NMCB 3 provides expeditionary construction and engineering support to expeditionary bases and responds to humanitarian assistance disaster relief requests. (U.S. Navy Combat Camera photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Martin Wright)
TOOR GHAR, Afghanistan (April 27, 2010) Seabees assigned to the water well detachment of Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 133 raise a section of pipe while drilling a 1,210-foot water well at a combat outpost in Toor Ghar, Afghanistan. NMCB-133 is in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility while on deployment in Afghanistan. (U.S. Navy photo by Chief Mass Communication Specialist Ryan C. Delcore/Released)
Demonstration of forklifting techniques on the dock of an Alaskan cannery. Full length video can be viewed at www.youtube.com/watch?v=oR5xvBYJB0A
Read about the long hours, dangerous work, strange characters and madness of Alaska salmon season and cannery work in the memoir
SLIME LINE: ADVENTURES IN FISH PROCESSING.
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U.S. Marine Corps Cpl. Luis Ortiz, a motor transportation operator with Third Battalion, Second Marines, Second Marine Division (2d MARDIV) secures faulty equipment to a trailer at Camp Wilson, Marine Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms, California, Oct. 14, 2019. Marines with Third Battalion, Second Marines are preparing to support 2d MARDIVās execution of MAGTF Warfighting Exercise 1-20 (MWX), from mid-October through early November. MWX is set to be the largest operation conducted by the division in several decades. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Jesse Carter-Powell)
Item 415.0229, Series 415, Department of Transportation, Administration Division, Community Relations and Communications Section, box 1, folder 25, King County Archives.
7TH FLEET AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY (July 26, 2017)Equipment Operator 3rd Class Zachary Darrow, assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 3, uses a cement drill during a construction project in Vatubou, Timor-Leste, July 27, 2017. NMCB 3 provides expeditionary construction and engineering support to expeditionary bases and responds to humanitarian assistance disaster relief requests. (U.S. Navy Combat Camera photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Martin Wright)
I wish I could place the location of this picture. A couple of thoughts are Sigonella, Sicily or possibly Guam.
Equipment Operator Constructionman Stephen Colprit, embarked aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Kearsarge (LHD 3), directs vehicles off a landing craft unit during the start of the 13-day humanitarian/civic assistance mission Continuing Promise (CP) 2008 in the Dominican Republic. Kearsarge is supporting the Caribbean Phase of CP 2008, an equal partnership mission between the United States, Canada, the Netherlands, Brazil, Nicaragua, Panama, Columbia, Dominican Republic, Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class David Danals/Released)
Scan of a photo I took on Guam in 1986, my last deployment with NMCB 74. This is Kenny Cassar on the left and "Lunchbox" on the right holding the pocket knife. I'm not sure why I don't remember Lunchbox's real name. Kenny was one of the job foremen. He led the BU squad. "BU" is the acronym given the Builder rating. Rating being your specialty that you received formal training in. They were essentially carpenters. They were responsible for building concrete forms, laying cement and cinder block and various other carpenter related duties. Lunchbox was a UT. UT stands for Utilitiesman, which is a plumber.
This location is in Barrigada, Guam. The EO's (equipment operators) had cleared 85 acres of jungle. In the process they unearthed a number of unexploded ordinance from WWII. One item being an unexploded 12 inch shell. We were building a LORAN station. LORAN is a Navy acronym for Long Range Antenna. This is the archaic technology used before satellite's and GPS. The antenna, when finished, would stand 750 feet tall. Our task was to build the concrete anchors for the guy wires which would stabilize the antenna. There would be two "rings" of anchors. An inner ring of 20'x25'x20' cement and rebar blocks and an outer ring of smaller anchors. I can't recall their dimensions (it WAS 22 years ago, come on!). Check out the set to see more pictures of the anchors.
I, being an SW (steelworker) had the pleasure of making bent pirces of steel from the large pile of straight pieces of steel. We would then weld them together into what looked like a giant Rubik's Cube with a hook. The set has pictures of this as well.
The antenna station is no longer in use. It's outdated technology relegated to the scrap heap of history. I'm curious to know if the antenna still stands. I don't imagine it does since it would be quite a nuisance to nearby Anderson Air Force Base.
Item 95-005-0772, Series 400, Department of Transportation, Road Services Division, box 23, King County Archives.
#komatsu #excavator #excavadora #excavatrice #articulatedrocktruck #tracks #elevated #machinery #operator #heavyequipment #equipmentoperator #HEO #hvet #highvelocity #yellow #training #camrose #training #fieldsite #oil #frontendloader #field #phantom #drone #phantomdrone #
Equipment Operator Ryan Smith empties a water truck at Camp Shelby. Seabees assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion
(NMCB) 74Ćs water well detail are in the field rigorously testing the new drill they will be using on their upcoming 2008 deployment. U.S. Navy photo By Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Gregory N. Juday. www.navy.com/
A masticator moving through an open space during the Crockets Knob Fire.
The Crockets Knob Fire was reported on the morning of August 22, 2022, after significant lightning occurred across the Malheur National Forest. The initial report was approximately 15 acres burning in brush, timber and slash within the 1996 Summit Fire scar. Numerous air and ground fire resources responded to suppress the fire. Gusty winds and steep, rugged terrain resulted in increased fire behavior and limited access for crews.
Overnight on August 23rd and into the early hours of August 24th, east winds pushed the fire over constructed containment lines, and the fire grew to 225 acres. The afternoon of August 25th brought considerable fire growth to the south and southeast, increasing its footprint from 225 acres to 1,000 acres. Over the next several days the fire grew to over 4,000 acres.
In total, the fire burned 4,287 acres.
Back row left to right - Philo, Ziggy, (don't recall the next two)
Front row left to right - Skid (Scott?) Rowe, Pacheco
Equipment Operator Constructionman Gregory Burton, assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 1, Task Force Sierra, uses a Bobcat front-end loader to bury a 240 millimeter armored cable. NMCB-1 and NMCB-15 are deployed to several locations in the Middle East and Afghanistan.
Darrell just started with us, coming from Samson Cree Nation. It's fantastic to see Darrell here with us because he worked so hard on getting here.
Think you've got what it takes ?
Looks like it's already been brazed once before! I'm guessing this was off the truck in the other picture.
Looks like they are just slacking! Pacheco on the right. I forgot the name of the guy on the left (sorry, guy on the left!)
Ziggy taking a picture with a Polaroid. That rebar bending machine saw waaaay too much action. That has to be the single worst job I did in the Navy. It was so incredibly monotonous. An example - put a 14" 90 degree bend in 140 7' rebar lengths.
caught with our Phantom 4 Drone, #phantom4 #phantomdrone #sky #rocktruck #articulatedrocktruck #rocktruck #articulated #wheels #mud #camrose #heavyequipment #equipmentoperator #hidef #highres #drone #hvet #highvelocity #training #swamp #mud #mechanics #jaxequipment #operator #exhaust #ART #load #gravelpit #field
#training #highvelocity #highvelocityequipmenttraining #safety #heavyequipment #dozer #bulldozer #hvet #tracks #blade #cab #operator #equipmentoperator #outdoor #trees #forest #camrose #alberta #komatsu #shovel #dirt #safetyvest
U.S. Navy Construction Mechanic 3rd Class Lucas McCleery, left, and U.S. Navy Equipment Operator 1st Class Jose Martinez, both Seabees with Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 133's Water Well Detachment, work on constructing a 1,210-foot-deep artesian well at a combat outpost in Toor Ghar, Afghanistan, April 27, 2010. (U.S. Navy photo by Chief Mass Communication Specialist Ryan C. Delcore/Released)