| I moonlight at a machine shop. I'm not a machinist, and I'm hardly a machine operator. Machine shops need bodies to do a few things (some of which OP mentioned) loading materials, removing materials, changing broken cutting bits, cleaning the machines (especially if you're cutting something like magnesium). Machine shops also need bodies to build jigs to hold pieces to the machine table while the machines remove material (think 5 axis pieces, especially). Despite all of this – there's an amazing amount of automation at play. Tool changes, coolant, temperature monitoring, the list goes on. I'm currently building some automation hardware and software so we can start to fill the gap of 'dead' time where machinists are pressing buttons, loading in blanks, and are bored out of their minds. It's such an interesting space. |
Someone more skilled than I could and should fill a book with the accessibility changes they have made over 50 years of operation. Every single inch of the place had fascinating design details. All machines were laser fenced. Vacuum work holding with audio alignment sensors. All paths had a raised curb. All readouts on CNCs were capable of displaying text one 15" tall letter at a time, or reading G-code aloud or via braille. All offices have one bright wall and one dark wall to provide high contrast for sign language interpreters.
One of the sighted employees I met works in the accessibility dept. redesigning systems to be compatible with various disabilities. He had a full lab of 3d printers, CNCS, and enough other equipment to make a makerspace jealous.
The company also did some amazing outreach through their charity. The provided dogs, housing, and general mobility training (how to navigate busses, etc.).
I should check in and see how they are coping with covid.