Interesting that he uses a claw hammer rather than a peen.
Yeah, I would have expected some kind of a fuller type head. Er, maybe that's not the right word... I was picturing a cross peen.
I love seeing old experienced hands making a skilled trade look easy like that. Watching each step, I'm tempted to think "No troubs, I could do that just as easy." Then I think of how many years he's been working at it to make it look so effortless and uncomplicated.
Wow. That was beautiful. The amount of work that went into that, the composing, work up, printing the music, number of hours and practice... Wow.
It reminds me of the near perfection that I see in Pink Floyd's The Wall. Arguably not even their best work for many, but every little noise and inflection of their voice has a perfect "fit"... Could just be the timing in my life when I first heard it, but it has the same kind of polished perfection that I saw in this version of "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly." Awesome.
This is a low def version of the most "striking" one that I've seen. In the higher def one, you can see the melted fat catch on fire as it drips down the side of the train.
Leave conducting to the train engineer! I have worked in high voltage for most of my life... Kind of interesting to be walking through a 230KV switchyard and feel hairs move around in reaction to the electric fields.
PMB wrote:This is a low def version of the most "striking" one that I've seen. In the higher def one, you can see the melted fat catch on fire as it drips down the side of the train.
Leave conducting to the train engineer! I have worked in high voltage for most of my life... Kind of interesting to be walking through a 230KV switchyard and feel hairs move around in reaction to the electric fields.
Now you know where AC/DC found inspiration by writing "High Voltage."