i'm not trying to be a smartass here, but the orig post was to see some millwright tool boxes.
i havent seen any pix yet.
#1 were all voyeurs here. we love pix.
#2 i dont think i know what a millwrights tool box looks like.
i can only assume its a guy who works in a mill that grinds stuff on a grist or a guy that operates a mill. than i assume he'd be like a machinist and use a similar tool box.
please dont bust my *** if i'm all wrong. i really dont know.
i've got to many tool boxes already. as if i need another, but i aint done learning
I am not a millwright, but my family has been in industrial construction for 3 generations and we hire them. We use union workers because our clients are big union compaines. You call out the millwrights when it is time to get machinery set in place and in operation. Conveyors, motors, shafts, kilns, gearing, turbines, generators, machinery of any type. After the foundations are in place and the structures are dried in your millwrights and electricians come in...the millwrights set all the equipment in place and the electricians wire it.
Also the term "millwright" comes from back in the windmill and grist mill days. They were extremely skilled. If you needed a grist mill the millwrights made a judgement on the water flow (velocity and volume), designed a mill that would work which included figuring out the gearing required to turn the stone, at the proper speed, and then make the shafts, wooden gears, cogs etc...and install them. They were a combination of engineer and cabinet maker. No insult intended to current millwrights, but the old (1700 & 1800) millwrights were truly special craftsmen. The modern millwright is a technically oriented, ****-retentive mechanic ....they can come in and set 100 ton kiln sections at a 37 1/2 degree slope while keeping the central axis within 1/10 of an inch over a 100' length.