Author Topic: My Alembic Exploiter guitar  (Read 465 times)

hardcoremike

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My Alembic Exploiter guitar
« Reply #15 on: November 17, 2005, 05:01:39 AM »
Thanks, Kevin and yeah, I knew you were joking!
 
Dad was a very generous person who gave of himself and his time to help many of his students. He was a genius (literally) and I never met a better Tool Die Maker or Machinist... EVER!
 
If I am not mistaken, one of his students founded Mesa Boogie as well. I believe I have the prototype handle strap holders for one of their first amps in my shop. He was involved in making the first die for these so they could make them in-house rather than farm them out.

kmh364

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My Alembic Exploiter guitar
« Reply #16 on: November 17, 2005, 05:28:32 AM »
T&D machinists never seem to get the credit they're due. It's considered a blue collar job, so there's no glamour involved. What most people don't understand about that particular avocation specifically, and other skilled labor jobs in general, is that some of the most brilliant people you'll ever meet are in that profession. Because they don't wear a suit and tie and have initials after their names and credentials framed on the wall, they are dismissed as working class.  
 
As a former pro HD truck and car mechanic, now turned degreed Electrical Engineer (Construction Management), I've seen the bias and discrimination first hand. In my line, I've actually found the more credentials an individual has, they more incompetent they tend to be, LOL! I'll stick with the tradesmen who work for and with me. The good ones are brilliant, and give an honest days work for an honest days pay (my IBEW journeymen electricians get paid a bunch more than me an hour as well!).

hardcoremike

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My Alembic Exploiter guitar
« Reply #17 on: November 17, 2005, 06:27:55 AM »
It's funny, isn't it! Dad had a masters and was listed as Professor C Coffel in the phone book. He worked for FORD in Dearborn and hauled us all out to California in the late 60's to teach at the local JC. Despite that, he often said, those who can not do, teach! LOL Every summer he would haul us back to Michigan and Alabama in a motorhome so we could experience our roots while he worked for Ford or GM etc for those three months we all had off. He would make as much in those three months as he did all year teaching but he loved to teach. He would hang his pay stubs on the wall at school and show the students how much dough they could make if they stuck with it. As a tooling and die inspector, he made some serious cash and would often work overtime because he liked it so much and TRIPLE time on Sundays from FORD was HUGE cash, even back then.  
 
He had just fully retired out here to Lake Martin, Alabama and had a milling machine delivered to his litle shop here so he could mess with his hobbies. (65 Honda Scramblers, vintage Mustangs and Sunbeam Tigers).... he died three weeks later. Life isn't fair sometimes but his dying is what brought me here. Mom was left with 5 acres and a couple homes, a shop, a barn etc so I figured why not come out and make a go of it... www.LakeshorePerformance.com It sure beat packing it all up and putting her in a condo somewhere...
 
Dad saves me each and everyday with some cool tooling he had been saving for that right moment and I think of him each and every day.
 
OK... you Alembic owners are pretty cool! LOL

bracheen

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My Alembic Exploiter guitar
« Reply #18 on: November 17, 2005, 08:58:37 AM »
Beautiful guitar Mike.  I like your Pantera on the website also.  I was watching Kill Bill #2 last night and spotted a Mangusta in the background on one of the scenes.
I respect the way you honor your dad and take care of your mom.  I admire and envy close families like yours and the Wickershams.
 
Sam

hardcoremike

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My Alembic Exploiter guitar
« Reply #19 on: November 17, 2005, 09:55:25 AM »
I got a little carried away with the Pantera. It was featured on Speedvision Classics (#18 I think) and I won trophy's in Monterey etc... very well known car in the Pantera world. (I rebuilt every nut and bolt and finshed it in 1996 at a very high cost.) I know the owner of the Goose in Kill Bill.  
 
Dad saved me a few times with the Pantera as well! Thanks to him I repaired my halfshafts for $11.50 when replacing them would have been $1200+ !
 
I sold the car last year at a huge loss to an eccentric Italian guy here in Alabama.

kmh364

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My Alembic Exploiter guitar
« Reply #20 on: November 17, 2005, 11:40:38 AM »
Nice website Mike! I see you are a bike nut. Me too...twenty years in the saddle and now (in my free time)I'm an MSF-Certified RiderCoach and am NJ State licensed by the NJMVC as an examiner (that means I'm a certed, lcensed motorcycle instructor and I officiate motorcycle licensure on behalf of the State).  
 
I wrenched professionally for five years, but I've had my hands under the hood since age 16. Once I retire from my real job, I hope to do something more with bikes, whether that entails building customs or motorcycle safety schools (or both) remains to be seen.  
 
Kudos! Always follow your dreams.
 
Cheers,
 
Kevin

hardcoremike

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My Alembic Exploiter guitar
« Reply #21 on: November 17, 2005, 04:47:17 PM »
Well golly gee whiz... how many tangents can this thread go off on!? (This is off my bands site...)
 
http://www.gearrocks.net/html/index.php?name=PNphpBB2&file=viewtopic&t=376