paul
Well-known member
Are there any regulations on passing gear down when stripping ?
Never heard of owt Paul, Manual handling and not overloading the scaffold would be the only things that anyone could chuck at you. Oh yeh and making sure the labourer at the bottom doesn't drop the gear for the last 12" the laszy little b4st4rd, and get every single tube either full of sh1t and dig a massive hole on the pristine lawn or smash the fck out of the stone flags out side a listed church! 'HOW FCKIN MANY TIMES HAVE I TO TELL YOU TO NOT DROP THEM AND PUT SOMERT ON THE FCKIN FLOOR YOU LITTLE FCKIN BELLEND GRRRRRRR'.......... Sorry got a little side tracked then, it's just 2nd nature when mentioning the labourer at the bottom of the chain.
i have always thought that scaffolds were magnets to wimmin with prams![]()
tube turds yan of ya pet hates lol can honestly say i never cracked a 400 year old flag stone ahahah few flower bed maby lol
The amount of times i pull up on a job to check the boys are ok or give them ahand to strip and i see them dropping gear to each other makes me nervous , when i used to do it ,it didnt seem to affect me but now i dont like seeing it , especially when they chain gear down from a big job on a saturday and sunday with job and knock . There all standing in a line catching gear from each other , it only takes one guy not to catch something and then its game over .
Yeh it's my pet hate, fckin tube turds!! We do loads of work in churches, and there's nothing better than putting a job inside, leaving it there for 2/3 months and then when you strip it, the sh1t has dried out and when you carry the kit out, you bombard the place with 3" pieces of Ethel's garden from higham. Obviously on a sh1ty building site, it can't be helped.
Alistair, (Almost) Ashamed To Say It But That Is Precisely What I Was Doing Today On A Demolition Site In Dundee, There Was Not A Soul Around Us For Miles, It Was Like Going Back In Time. Fekking Fabulous.