View allAll Photos Tagged arcwelding

Left this one in a completely raw state, rust and rough cut edges

This is called Rust Rider, it is a free standing motor cycle front end that i built using old rusted tools and iron junk . I used a arc welder to keep it all together .The seat for it will be finished next week . It will not tip over ,it stands on its own .

Lincoln Electric introduced new Consumable packaging options like the 2,200 lb. Speed-Feed Stem at the 2009 AWS Fabtech Show

Electric welding iron sculpture, workshops with Lincolnshire Schools, October 2008

Image of fire or burner seen from big factory in the dark

Wow. Where to begin?

 

Today suck(s/ed).

 

As of last week I had about fifty dollars in my account to last me until today. More than enough. Or so I thought. What happened is that the gym I supposedly canceled my membership a month or so ago charged me the normal monthly membership fee. About forty-five dollars. This would have irked me if I had known about it before I had bought myself some food and a record, (Yes, I buy vinyl) putting me in the hole twice. Not only am I negative the money that wasn't there, I now also have two over-draft charges at twenty-eight bucks a pop.

 

Of course, this irks me. But to make matters worse, today, payday, I find out that I got screwed out of thirty hours worth of pay abouts meaning if they don't fix it by the end of the month, I can't pay rent, I can't pay electricity, and I sure can't buy any food.

 

The worst part of all of this is that we caught the fact that they were shirking me of thirty hours, fixed it last week, turned it into payroll before checks were printed, and thought nothing of it.

 

To add further injury to my already hurting financial situation, they are telling me that the money they owe me may show up on the next paycheck. Which is the seventh.

 

Seriously, I felt like I could stab someone or something.

 

For all of five minutes. It's hard for me to stay angry. Don't ask me why.

 

Oh, and my sickness has turned into a lovely cough which sounds a lot like bronchitis. Hurray for life!

I took this in complete darkness with a tripod, experimenting with different exposures and of course, manual zone focus as the camera would not work in auto focus.

Preparing the gear to start driving the piles in the Inner Basin for the pontoons.

 

Scrabster Harbour, Caithness, Scotland.

Bob Gifford installs a gate designed by Chris Sorensen, and clearly loves his work!

Offline programming on the factory floor:

Detlef Wittke creates robot programs in RobotStudio ArcWeld PowerPac.

Our Welding Pro, Mike, Stick Welding for the video shoot.

If there's one thing I'm always drawn to as a snapper it's metalworkers.

 

There's often smoke, bright lights, dark spaces, mysterious masks and drama. They're an absolute gift.

 

This guy working on a gate in school is unfortunately working in broad daylight, but there's still something alluring in that arc spot.

 

Hopefully the broken gate is fixed now!

My Final project for first year sculpture

"We say we love flowers, yet we pluck them. We say we love trees, yet we cut them down. And people still wonder why some are afraid when told they are loved."

-Author Unknown

“Find something you love to do and you'll never have to work a day in your life”

-Harvey MacKay

Welding illustration hand colored photograph

On a wet and miserable February day what I think will be the last but one Piling Gate is constructed in the inner harbour, unless they hit problems I expect them to be taking this apart by Saturday.

It looks as though piling at the other end of the pier could take a few more weeks yet whilst they drive the final piles for the open section.

 

Scrabster Harbour, Caithness, Scotland.

“Far and away the best prize that life offers is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.”

-Theodore Roosevelt

Les membres des TUAC 501 travaillant chez les Ateliers Beauchemin ont renouvelé leur convention collective! Lire la suite : goo.gl/CrXRdK #TUAC #UFCW #UFCWCanada #FTQ #SyndQC

Shaped, and under-sized units are arc welded to form a frame. In addition, features such as hinges are welded in position.

 

notice the yellow flame?this was taken at 1/4000 of a secs.

Specialist Ryan Thomas, 3rd Platoon, 573rd Clearance Company, 1st Engineer Battalion, 130th Engineer Brigade, creates a metal grate with arc welds. The grate was used to cover a culvert on a main supply route in Iraq and will ensure water flow and protection against unwanted access. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Chad D. Nelson)

I have coffee at a little cafe at 9th. & Stewart near downtown Seattle most mornings. In an area with several skyscrapers under construction there is normally welding and grinding going on. This seemed, to me, to catch the essence - the start - the beginning - of a building that will touch the sky and what has gone into it.

1 2 3 4 6 ••• 12 13