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  • Millwright industrial
  • Long Sault, ON, Canada

    Millwright industrial

    Location
    Long Sault, ON
    Workplace information
    On site
    Salary
    25.00 to 35.00 hourly (To be negotiated) / 40 hours per week
    Terms of employment
    Permanent employment
    Full time
    Day, Overtime
    Starts as soon as possible
    vacancies
    2 vacancies
    Source
    Job Bank #3217556
    Languages

    English

    Education
    No degree, certificate or diploma
    Experience

    2 years to less than 3 years

    On site

    Work must be completed at the physical location. There is no option to work remotely.

    Work setting
    Maintenance
    Repair
    Overhaul
    New construction
    Machine set-up
    Level of expertise
    Maintenance and repair
    Responsibilities
    Tasks
    Detect and troubleshoot irregularities and malfunctions
    Construct foundations for machinery
    Fabricate parts required during overhaul, maintenance or set-up
    Installing machinery and equipment
    Operate hoisting and lifting equipment
    Repair or replace defective or worn-out parts and components using hand, power or specially designed tools
    Read and interpret blueprints, maps, drawings and specifications
    Perform preventive maintenance
    Perform routine maintenance on equipment and machinery
    Experience and specialization
    Welding techniques
    TIG
    MIG
    ARC
    Equipment and machinery experience
    Conveyor
    Electrical and electronic controls
    Fans and blowers
    Lathes and other machining tools
    Pneumatic system
    Power tools
    Press brakes and metalworking equipment
    Pumps and compressors
    Tool grinders
    Welding equipment
    Hydraulic components
    Area of specialization
    Start-up and testing
    Rigging and handling
    Troubleshooting
    Centering and setting to elevation
    Bearing, seals and packing
    Additional information
    Work conditions and physical capabilities
    Attention to detail
    Own tools/equipment
    Steel-toed safety boots

    Apply now: Millwright industrial

Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • player
  • player

    Someone perceived to be active on a particular scene, whether social, gambling, industrial or whatever. Similarly can used for someone with multiple partners (male or female).

  • thatcher years
  • thatcher years

    A time of abject poverty for masses of citizens of the UK despite billions of dollars flowing into the Treasury coffers from oil revenue. Alternative view of this period passed on by Mike Blackburn: The 'Thatcher Years' were simply a period during which Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister of the UK. Your definition above is rubbish. This was the time of the housing boom in Britain, the yuppie arrived, there was a perceived turning away from any corporate mentality and an embracing of selfishness and personal gain. There was not widespread poverty, any more than there was during any other decade of the 20th century. The gap between rich and poor, however, did grow rather alarmingly. NOBODY refers to Thatcher Years as being a time of great poverty, aside, maybe, from misinformed Americans (you don't think Americans can be misinformed? Who voted for George W then?). (ed: I'm Welsh by birth and lived in Wales during most of the Thatcher Years. I know there was desperate poverty amongst many, many people - because I lived the horror myself and saw first hand the collapse of communities. There were streets I know where the only person working was employed by the DSS to administer payments to the others. The comment about the gap widening between rich and poor was spot on and resulted in Cardboard City - which was a community of hundreds of impoverished people who, had to live in boxes under Waterloo Station in the heart of 'affluent London'. And this was just one instance of overt degeneration of society under that government. Personally I think Mike was insulated somehow from the worst of Thatcherism. The larger part of the population suffered - badly!) Kevin sends in the following addition: 3 million unemployed officially but more like 6 million in reality. Miner's Strike; destruction of Britain's industrial base; top 10% never better off; bottom 10% never worse off. (ed: Anyone want to expand further - either side of the equation?) UK

  • Cricket
  • Cricket

    Color of skin vs. cricket's color (brown/black). Pure blooded Blacks having "large fish eyes, dark brown skin, and long legs like a cricket." Could also refer to Blacks that stay up all night playing loud thumping music, real common in the industrial Midwest.

  • Bootlip
  • Bootlip

    During the Industrial boom of the auto industry and OSHA'a requirement of safety precautions, workers were required to wear steel-toed boots. Common steel-toed boots are black in color and have large, bulky toes - referencing the size of black's lips.

  • scammels
  • scammels

    Noun. Prominent and erect female nipples. An abbreviated form of scammel wheel nuts. Scammel, a manufacturer of heavy and industrial vehicles.

  • bobbins
  • bobbins

    adj useless junk. While quite recent slang, it’s rather charming: Did your grandmother leave you anything good? / Nope, just a complete load of ancient bobbins. One possible etymology: that it’s from the north of England (particularly the Lancashire and Manchester areas), which used to be supported largely by cotton mills. As the industrial revolution drew to a close, the mills closed down and the population found itself with a surfeit of largely worthless milling machinery. During that time the phrase “‘twas worth nout but bobbins” sprung up; years later we’re left only with the last word.

  • cut
  • cut

    Canal. During the 19th century there was prolific expansion of the industrial canal systems both in the Midlands, Yorkshire, and especially Lancashire. Canals were "cut into the ground" Thus "Cut" became synonymous with "Canal". "Where's little Jimmy?", " He's playin'in't fiels beside cut".

  • Spectraflair
  • Spectraflair

       From Wikipedia:  “A specialized diffractive colorant for automotive and industrial coatings that show multiple rainbow colors as the viewing angle changes. This pigment is based on microscopic aluminum flakes layered with glass and inorganic pigments. The combination of SpectraFlair’s rainbow-like color, aluminum core, and fine particle size creates an iridescent, liquid silver metallic appearance.”  Spectaflair is often used by indie makers or frankeners to create linear or scattered holographic polishes.

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang Millwright industrial

Millwright industrial

  • player
  • player

    Someone perceived to be active on a particular scene, whether social, gambling, industrial or whatever. Similarly can used for someone with multiple partners (male or female).

  • thatcher years
  • thatcher years

    A time of abject poverty for masses of citizens of the UK despite billions of dollars flowing into the Treasury coffers from oil revenue. Alternative view of this period passed on by Mike Blackburn: The 'Thatcher Years' were simply a period during which Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister of the UK. Your definition above is rubbish. This was the time of the housing boom in Britain, the yuppie arrived, there was a perceived turning away from any corporate mentality and an embracing of selfishness and personal gain. There was not widespread poverty, any more than there was during any other decade of the 20th century. The gap between rich and poor, however, did grow rather alarmingly. NOBODY refers to Thatcher Years as being a time of great poverty, aside, maybe, from misinformed Americans (you don't think Americans can be misinformed? Who voted for George W then?). (ed: I'm Welsh by birth and lived in Wales during most of the Thatcher Years. I know there was desperate poverty amongst many, many people - because I lived the horror myself and saw first hand the collapse of communities. There were streets I know where the only person working was employed by the DSS to administer payments to the others. The comment about the gap widening between rich and poor was spot on and resulted in Cardboard City - which was a community of hundreds of impoverished people who, had to live in boxes under Waterloo Station in the heart of 'affluent London'. And this was just one instance of overt degeneration of society under that government. Personally I think Mike was insulated somehow from the worst of Thatcherism. The larger part of the population suffered - badly!) Kevin sends in the following addition: 3 million unemployed officially but more like 6 million in reality. Miner's Strike; destruction of Britain's industrial base; top 10% never better off; bottom 10% never worse off. (ed: Anyone want to expand further - either side of the equation?) UK

  • Cricket
  • Cricket

    Color of skin vs. cricket's color (brown/black). Pure blooded Blacks having "large fish eyes, dark brown skin, and long legs like a cricket." Could also refer to Blacks that stay up all night playing loud thumping music, real common in the industrial Midwest.

  • Bootlip
  • Bootlip

    During the Industrial boom of the auto industry and OSHA'a requirement of safety precautions, workers were required to wear steel-toed boots. Common steel-toed boots are black in color and have large, bulky toes - referencing the size of black's lips.

  • scammels
  • scammels

    Noun. Prominent and erect female nipples. An abbreviated form of scammel wheel nuts. Scammel, a manufacturer of heavy and industrial vehicles.

  • bobbins
  • bobbins

    adj useless junk. While quite recent slang, it’s rather charming: Did your grandmother leave you anything good? / Nope, just a complete load of ancient bobbins. One possible etymology: that it’s from the north of England (particularly the Lancashire and Manchester areas), which used to be supported largely by cotton mills. As the industrial revolution drew to a close, the mills closed down and the population found itself with a surfeit of largely worthless milling machinery. During that time the phrase “‘twas worth nout but bobbins” sprung up; years later we’re left only with the last word.

  • cut
  • cut

    Canal. During the 19th century there was prolific expansion of the industrial canal systems both in the Midlands, Yorkshire, and especially Lancashire. Canals were "cut into the ground" Thus "Cut" became synonymous with "Canal". "Where's little Jimmy?", " He's playin'in't fiels beside cut".

  • Spectraflair
  • Spectraflair

       From Wikipedia:  “A specialized diffractive colorant for automotive and industrial coatings that show multiple rainbow colors as the viewing angle changes. This pigment is based on microscopic aluminum flakes layered with glass and inorganic pigments. The combination of SpectraFlair’s rainbow-like color, aluminum core, and fine particle size creates an iridescent, liquid silver metallic appearance.”  Spectaflair is often used by indie makers or frankeners to create linear or scattered holographic polishes.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing

Millwright industrial

  • Millwright
  • factories, power plants, and construction sites. The term millwright (also known as industrial mechanic) is mainly used in the United States, Canada and

  • Industrial Revolution
  • horse-powered workshop, and light industrial machinery. Pre-industrial machinery was built by various craftsmen—millwrights built watermills and windmills;

  • Career and technical education
  • mechanic/restoration/scrapping, air conditioning, aircraft technician, boiler, millwright/industrial mechanic. Metal fabrication – machinist, lathes, milling, drilling

  • Social class in the United States
  • mechanic/restoration/scrapping, refrigeration/air conditioning, boiler, millwright/industrial mechanic. Metal fabrication - machinist, lathes, milling, drilling

  • James Brindley
  • mother. At age 17, encouraged by his mother, he was apprenticed to a millwright in exceptional skill and ability. Having completed his apprenticeship

  • Industrial architecture
  • Industrial architecture is the design and construction of buildings facilitating the needs of the industrial sector. The architecture revolving around

  • Cocking Foundry
  • drawn up between the Cowdray Estate and "Robert Chorley of Midhurst, millwright" in respect of "two pieces of meadow or pasture land called Upper and

  • Machinist
  • any or all of the titles listed above. Other related fields include Millwrights, quality assurance, and mechanical engineers. In Australia, a related

  • List of construction trades
  • Hod carrier is a subsidiary trade (also see Laborer). Millwright installs various industrial equipment. Painter, a tradesperson responsible for the painting

  • Omega Morgan
  • plant relocations, equipment installations, millwrighting, and applied and industrial metrology. Morgan Industrial was founded in 1991 in North Plains, Oregon