Home > categories > Machinery & Equipment > Gantry Cranes > What jobs require light-mod-or heavy physical activity?
Question:

What jobs require light-mod-or heavy physical activity?

hey,i just graduated from undergrad w/ a degree in biology and i think i just wasted 5 years of my life but its okayright now i'd like to get a job that requires some physical activityplease help me out w/ some suggestions.i was thinkin ups/fedex warehouse lifting boxes? thanks for ur help

Answer:

You may try a job such as changing tiresIt is quite the workout and provides my husband a full and deep sleep night after nightStart with car tires, and work your way up to the truck and offroad tiresPretty soon you could be flippin' those huge crane tires like they do on The World's Strongest Man competitionsMy husband is an average size guy, 5'11, 180 lbs, and he can put on giant tractor and crane tiresAlso, this is an industry that has yet to failPossibly 50 years after they stop making nails, then people will no longer have flat tiresGood Luck on you new career, mabey if the manual labor does not work out, you can go make biochem weapons for our govt.!!!!!
you could have saved a lot of energy by 1not believing the hype 2not jumping on the bandwagon 3not sitting through your contractors bs presentation 4use less energy sorry those guys are just cashing in on the latest scam and you bought itgalvalume is crap and you're gonna find out the hard wayall the best
When I bought my house I gutted itThen I used R-33 insulation with moisture barrier on every external wall {4 story split level ranch} stapling it to every stud every 4 Then I sheer walled them by installing 5/8 plywood 4x8 standing up then 4x12x5/8 sheet rock perpendicular to the plywood{I only had to tape one seem at 4' the entire way very nice lol} This gave like a R-bagillion ratingI also installed a layer of attic R-33 over the existing blown in insulation, and used 1 1/2 hard foam insulation {they put in the exterior walls between outside brick and inside wall for temp and moisture and not sure of its R rating but its commercial soooo lol} I got from one of my job sites to enclose the bays under the house, and foam wrapped all of my plumbingI have all the household appliances from side by side frigto Washer/Dryer, including a hot tub, {central air w/AC set a consistent 70deg (+/-) 1% tolerance} and 500Wats of outdoor lo-volt landscape lighting.I have not paid over $100 for a utility{gas Electric} bill since I moved in{I also upgraded to 200Amps, rewired the entire house in armoured cable, and bought all new Energy Star appliances as well including tub and air} So it has always been my understanding that a contained atmosphere is economically easier to maintain constant temperatures in When dealing with insulation you cant adjust your rating for one tempwith out the other rating suffering I would have to say then the best way to save money isTo find that happy medium per your budget and environment, and establish consistency

Share to: