
| 1st June 2010 |
Got rid of the photo slideshow thingy that used to be at the bottom of the page, as I discovered that on the initial page open, it wanted to preload the photos into it. If you have a couple of photos that's fine, but not when you have 110!! So removed the module and repositioned the "Next Doctor Who In The UK) module to the left. Pages load much quicker now ;) |
A new project - the Steampunk Keyboard - is underway! Progress, blogs and photos in the Steampunk Keyboard Project Section. At a bit of a halt now! Mainly due to winter (too cold in the workshop!) but also due to the lack of materials! The next bit to do is the sides, so I am currently looking (albeit not terribly hard!) for 1/4" brass plate. |
Added a blogging module to the site so that The Author can rant and rave at leisure. (And he has!) |
Born to parents Gerald and Joan, Alan attended Calton Road Infants and Junior schools before, getting a place at Sir Thomas Richs Grammar school in Longlevens. Leaving with a few "O" Levels, then got an engineering apprenticeship at the Wall's Ice Cream factory in Gloucester. Four happy (and some not so happy) years later, Alan found himself out of a job in a very difficult political climate of the time. Jobs were few and far between and unemployment was high under the Margaret Thatcher rule. However, perseverance paid off and after a year drawing unemployment benefit (of £12.50 a fortnight!) Alan found a job on a farm in Taynton, working as a milkman. 4 am starts and a distinct lack of being paid on time (if at all) forced the job-hunting yet again - and six months later found a job working at the nearer Moreland's Match Factory (now an industrial estate) working as a service/restoration engineer on industrial cleaning equipment. The company was small, but it was back in engineering (of sorts) again. Six (happy) months later Alan was shocked to get the sack! Very suddenly one morning, managed to get told not to come back for no readily apparent reason - so he didn't!
Not wishing to go back to drawing unemployment benefit, a friend advised that there are employment agencies out there that would find temporary work quickly. Knowing nothing of this, Alan scuttled along to an employment agency, who found some work for him as a machine operator in a shower factory in Cheltenham - starting the very next week! Turning up on the Monday morning, papers in hand Alan wasn't quite sure what to expect....but what greeted him was to amuse for the rest of his time there!! Basically, a machine operator's role is to place components in a machine of some sort, press a few buttons (or twiddle a few handles) and extract the finished component a few seconds/minutes later. Then repeat it. And again and again and again. Not only that, you had to do a set amount of components in an hour - every hour! Well. Alan was not at all happy with this - went for lunch and didn't go back! (Whether he was missed or not he never found out!). He went back to the Agency instead and was told to give it another go. So he did.
Fourteen years later he was still there! However, things had changed rather a lot over that fourteen years. But that's a digression - back to the beginning of that fourteen years then. Perhaps it was the machine he was working on at the time, but Alan still wasn't keen - although the work did get better. It was still repetative and boring - but friends were made and fun was had whilst doing this boring repetetive work. Then one day it all changed! An internal vacancy arose that was to be the first of a few different roles within the Factory. The first step was to get a permanent job - as the permanent workers got paid a lot more and you were assured of work - whereas as an Agency worker, you got paid a cut of the Agent's fee and it was (in some cases very) temporary! Alan was successful and was taken on permanently. And so started a few internal jobs with the Factory.
The first role was in the Short Order Shop - and we have to mention this first role as it was a pivotal period for Alan in the 1980's. Alan was working as a short order machinist - that meant that he was to make individual parts to order and there were (hardly) any time limits! So the variety appeared and kept his attention. That and a very good and funny bunch of guys that worked there - Ken Holtom (the boss), Johnny Millin, Tony Legg (Shinners) to name a few. But far and away the biggest influence was Alan's chargehand, Brian Ursell, who not only trained Alan in the fine arts of specialist machining, also provided a few cigarettes when times were hard! Then on to another type of specialist machining - this time as a machine setter on the dirtiest and most complicated of machines - Didomats and AM2's. Under the watchful eye of Colin Cheal (?), Alan spent a couple of years setting and maintaining these huge hydraulic monsters. Then onto Quality Control - and nights - for twelve years!
Quality Control - Alan's biggest influences here were (the late) John Bennett, Doug Little and Mike Hawtin, along with the biggest amusements (who shall remain nameless). Nights was a great place - got to know a lot of good people and sometimes did a bit of quality control thrown in! From Quliaity Control and nights came days and Production Engineering. Here were people like Clive Hughes, Derek Bradley and many other people providing an enjoyable time on days! Not so enjoyable was the daily drive to Wolverhampton to Meynell - but once there - a good crew too.
Moving on - and a huge change of career. Knowing people in the IT Department at Mira sparked an interest in IT and so Alan decided it was time to change careers and go for a job in IT. Luckily one such job arose at Gloucestershire Health Authority, starting as a support technician supporting 100 users on a small isolated network. Ten years later and Alan is the head of a seven-strong team of senior technicians looking after a Countywide set of major servers, running such things as Patient Systems, Clinical Systems, Email File & Print Services - to name but a few of the 300 strong server estate.
Hobbies are mainly to do with Doctor Who, Sci-Fi or computers! Alan has written a couple of websites (on the links page) and continues to write them for pleasure, rather than fiscal gain. Alan also enjoys many Science-Fiction programmes, such as Battlestar Galactica, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles and the Stargate series, however has been a life-long fan (43 years) of Doctor Who (since about 1967).
Alan has a healthy interest in everything electrical and mechanical (preferably electro-mechanical!) which probably stemmed from his early career aspirations to be a maintenance engineer. Having discovered an aptitude for anything electrical or mechanical, Alan likes the machines of a bygone era (without all those nasty electronics) and would have been very happy as Charles Babbage's assistant.
His music tastes are somewhat eclectic and wide ranging, from classical music to the drum and bass of the present time and his choice of films are almost the same. From musical classics like Chitty, Chitty, Bang, Bang and Oliver! to present day CGI wonder films, such as The Matrix, Blade and Underworld Alan likes the Sci-Fi/Vampire ones the best, however is not averse to a few comedies (like the Carry-On's) and the programmes of the 70's and 80's (Reginald Perrin, Morecambe & Wise and so on).
Last Updated (Saturday, 13 March 2010 14:06)
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