stateofgrace
Unregistered
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2006
- Messages
- 3,843
My business is of course safety at sea (including their steel structures), but I can apparently learn a lot from safety in office towers and how poorly US authorities investigate those, particularly 911. Or vice versa, people interested in safety in office towers can learn from what happens at sea, where everything happens. Lots of pirates around that sink ships intentionally for various reasons ... and most of these pirates are actually sitting ashore in office towers. It's a small world.
So my business is doing well, thank you. It will never sink because it is based on good ground and on common sense.
Really?
What steel structures are you responsible for offshore?
Winches? "A" Frames? Cranes? Tuggers? Maybe Vertical Lay systems? How about steel ropes or steel armoured cables?
Which steel structures do you actually work on offshore? I only ask because you never know one day you may actually come across somebody who really does work offshore,really does work on steel structures and has done so for the better part of thirteen years. You may actually come across somebody who has just spent the last four weeks sailing across the atlantic all the way from Nigeria in West Africa to Tampa Bay in the US, working on and maintaining steel structures on a real offshore vessel. You may come somebody who can ask you all sorts of questions about offshore safety and steel structures.
So just to establish a base to work with, which steel frame structures on offshore vessels do you work with? What exactly are your responsibilities for the said structures?
Oh yes and the question I asked you last time you were here and you failed to answer. You know the one that every single offshore worker would know the answer to.
" What is the exclusion zone? " Any idea yet my co offshore worker?
Sorry for the further derail ,but this thread is going nowhere anyway.
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