https://xcancel.com/Stubbs_GunGuy/status/2040775515577975243
Back story reminder
The official story is now that a piece of metal that was probably inspected 100 times just already had a hole drilled in it and they think people will believe that.
I've had an inspector fail a part with an M10x1.5" threaded hole because they put a 3/8-16" bolt in it and decided it was wrong.
This part weighed 500 lbs, takes a month to make, then it has to be rolled into a bomb shelter and charged to tens of thousands of volts, then discharged in a second, 2500 times. It goes into a reactor.
After a solid WEEK of testing somebody put a red tag on it and I legitimately was made to write an email explaining how the bolts are coincidental dimensionally similar.
Quality, source inspectors, and any third party involved seem to have the end goal of just not fucking buying the part. For anything that leaves the ground it has to be twice as perfect. Each individual part of something of this level of importance has to be literally perfect. Individual fasteners are X-rayed for the possibility that somebody might have looked at it wrong. Every part I sent a CofC off had a piece of paper thrown in that promised we didn't buy it from somebody who used any material from an African country that no longer existed.
My hobbies during this period of employment consisted of driving around at midnight with no lights looking for people to fight and binge drinking.
https://xcancel.com/Stubbs_GunGuy/status/2040775515577975243
[Back story reminder](https://poal.co/static/images/6b4f1d615f562373.png)
>The official story is now that a piece of metal that was probably inspected 100 times just already had a hole drilled in it and they think people will believe that.
>
I've had an inspector fail a part with an M10x1.5" threaded hole because they put a 3/8-16" bolt in it and decided it was wrong.
>
This part weighed 500 lbs, takes a month to make, then it has to be rolled into a bomb shelter and charged to tens of thousands of volts, then discharged in a second, 2500 times. It goes into a reactor.
>
After a solid WEEK of testing somebody put a red tag on it and I legitimately was made to write an email explaining how the bolts are coincidental dimensionally similar.
>
Quality, source inspectors, and any third party involved seem to have the end goal of just not fucking buying the part. For anything that leaves the ground it has to be twice as perfect. Each individual part of something of this level of importance has to be literally perfect. Individual fasteners are X-rayed for the possibility that somebody might have looked at it wrong. Every part I sent a CofC off had a piece of paper thrown in that promised we didn't buy it from somebody who used any material from an African country that no longer existed.
>
My hobbies during this period of employment consisted of driving around at midnight with no lights looking for people to fight and binge drinking.