Yeah, it sucks when it's really cold out. Did a service upgrade when it was
-12 one time. NEVER AGAIN!!!!!!!
My winter PPE:+
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I'm still trying to figure out why most attic work happens June through August and most outdoor(& indoor, unheated) work happens December through February.![]()
Yea, 10% seems to optimistic. When I was working in cold, I think a 25% reduction was more like it.I read that on average you can count on 10% reduction in productivity in winter. Not sure what that is based on. It's 5 degrees right now and was also yesterday. I'm roughing a huge addition and I know my production is down way more than 10%.
I DO NOT miss that at all. Good luck to you.The real question is what is going to kill me first, the cold or the fumes from the heaters.![]()
I believe we broke a foot (pardon the pun) here in Raintree. It's just barely still snizzling (snow drizzling).Larry Fine how much did you get?
I remember wiring a 21 unit condo project in Breckenridge CO in the dead of winter in the late 70's. If it was clear over night it was brutal in the morning. We would listen to the local radio station before going to the jobsite and we would hear it was 10 to 20 below on the clear mornings. You would hope it would snow so it would warm up. There was no heat on the jobsite. You had to store the wire off site in a heated work trailer or the insulation on the wire would crack or split when you pulled it. The State inspector knew this and really checked for this problem. A lot of guys just couldn't handle the cold and would head back down to Denver to try and find work. What an experience! I wouldn't do it again but glad I did it.
Now that is funny. Back then, go to the only stop light in town and turn right. A block up and you will find the Saw Mill Creek Condos. Coldest Winter of my life was piping the feeders from the service to each unit through the parking structure.
You almost did not want to take a break to warm up because you would need to go back out and adjust to the cold again. My mom had made me a Frost Line Parka and it was stolen on that job.
If my memory serves me right the project was called the Double Eagle Condos. It was on Four-a-Clock Road or that might have been the name of the ski slope run it was near. I do remember one of the restaurants we would frequent was named the Whales Tale. Every now and then we would drive over to Frisco to Smoke'n Willey's for ribs or go to a bar named the Moose Jaw to shoot pool and have a beer.
We picked up some more work in the area that following summer and went over to Smoke'n Willy's to eat. The sign out front said closed so we went around back. The owner came to the back door and told us that they were closed for the week. He said that the Hell Angles were in town and had hired them to feed the gang while they were camped at one of the nearby state campgrounds for one of their week long road rallies. Wild times in Summit County in the 70's!
I started this thread because we got a little snow and it shut down everything. Of course they dont clear our roads like they do up north.
But I do know how hard it is to work in the cold and I would hate to have that to look foward to for a whole winter.