I took machine shop in a vocational technical high school. We moved during my senior year, and I ended up going a different route. I have a lot of respect for machinist and tool & die folks. That is a heck of a skill. Sad to see the certification go. You would hope that folks restoring older cars or folks into racing would keep a machine shop running. Guess not. That is bad. On Mon, Mar 8, 2010 at 3:11 PM, Bruce Hevner <scramblr@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I am an ASE certified Master Automotive Machinist. Have been since they > first started the series a LONG time ago. > > Got a letter from them today telling me that after the next round of > certification (this fall) they will drop the "Automotive Machinist" series. > They said declining number of members taking or renewing this certification > made it impractical for them to continue supporting it. > > > > Think of it,, when's the last time you heard anyone say "I want to be an > Automotive Machinist". I'm part of a dying breed. The shops that ARE still > open aren't buying new equipment or hiring new help. In just a few short > years you will be hard pressed to find ANY small auto machine shops much > less modern well equipped ones. > > > > When I think back of when I started in the hot rod machine shop (1965) and > the 60 hour weeks we used to work,,, seems like a different planet,,,, sad. > > > > But HEY,,, that's just ME! > > Bruce Hevner _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com