Dollar General feels more accurate here.
Indeed, but everything you need is there. And I'll throw one in for free and it is awesome to get started: http://websdr.org/
First thing I did when I moved out was eat an entire roll of cookie dough.
At that pay, especially part time, I would find another job ASAP. It is important to know (like what the other commenter asked) what your end goal is. Want to primarily sit at a desk doing CAD/CAM, or get your hands dirty every day?
If the latter, I strongly believe that the core of learning how to do setups is to run a large amount of them and see/ask questions about the approach that was used. It can really suck to do a run that takes 20 seconds per work piece all day for a week, but the vast majority of us have been there at one point or another. I guess this is my way of saying that you should build your skills as an operator first. Get enough time doing that and you will know if a setup is shit and how to rectify it. There a good reasons why machining is traditionally an apprenticed position. Come to think of it, search for an apprenticeship somewhere reputable and you are going to have a much easier time starting out.
Np, I hope you enjoy the edit!
I have a horrible feeling that this kid is going to wind up like Kevin Mitnick.
Scotch is more of a brand name. 3M is the parent company, and they make nearly everything
I can't claim this one. But yeah, props to whoever made this.
Replying again to let you know that I may have solved it. catbox.moe seems to be the way
So close to Sotty in a Bugatti.
I really miss those very solid videos from The Onion.
jawa21
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I'm sure. However, I am not in a position to self host and videos are huge unless you post them as webm which some people might even report you for.