Page 1740946 ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 通常モードに戻る ┃ INDEX ┃ ≪前へ │ 次へ≫ ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ▼Glaziers Winchmore Williampaf 17/11/14(火) 7:01 ─────────────────────────────────────── ■題名 : Glaziers Winchmore ■名前 : Williampaf <glazier40@mail.ru> ■日付 : 17/11/14(火) 7:01 ■Web : http://glaziers-winchmore-hill.co.uk -------------------------------------------------------------------------
[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glazier]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glazier [/url] Glazier From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia For the surname, see Glazier (surname). A glazier at the job, 1946. This Deutsche Bundespost postage stamp, issued in 1986, commemorates glaziers. A glazier is an experienced tradesman responsible for trimming, setting up, and removing glass (and materials used as substitutes for cup, such as some plastics).[1] Glaziers may use glass in a variety of materials and settings, such as home windows, doors, shower doors, skylights, storefronts, display cases, mirrors, facades, interior wall space, ceilings, and tabletops.[1][2] Contents [hide] 1 Responsibilities and tools 2 Education and training Glaziers Winchmore Hill, N21, Glazing [url=http://glaziers-winchmore-hill.co.uk]More info>>>[/url] 3 Occupational hazards 4 In the United States 5 See also 6 Notes 7 External links Duties and tools[edit] A set of glazier tools The Occupational View Handbook of the U.S. Department of Labor lists the following as typical duties for a glazier: Follow blueprints or specifications Remove any old or broken cup before setting up replacement cup Cut glass to the specified shape and size Make or install sashes or moldings for cup installation Fasten cup into frames or sashes with clips, moldings, or other styles of fasteners Add weather seal or putty around pane edges to seal important joints.[3] The Country wide Occupational Analysis recognized by the Canadian Council of Directors of Apprenticeship separates the trade into 5 blocks of skills, each with a list of skills, and a summary of tasks and subtasks a journeyman is likely to be able to accomplish:[4] Block A - Occupational Skills 1. Uses and maintains equipment and tools 2. Organizes work 3. Performs regular activities Block B - Commercial Home window and Door Systems 4. Fabricates commercial door and windowpane systems 5. Installs commercial windows and door systems Stop C - Residential Windows and Door Systems 6. Installs residential window systems 7. Installs home door systems Stop D - Area of expertise Cup and Products 8. Installs and Fabricates area of expertise cup and products 9. Installs cup systems on vehicles Stop E - Servicing 10. Services commercial door and windowpane systems 11. Services residential windows and door systems 12. Services niche products and cup. Tools used by glaziers "include cutting boards, glass-cutting blades, straightedges, glazing knives, saws, drills, grinders, putty, and glazing compounds."[1] Some glaziers work specifically with cup in motor vehicles; other work with the safety cup found in aircraft specifically.[1][3] Education and training[edit] Glaziers are usually educated at the high school diploma or equal level and find out the skills of the trade via an apprenticeship program, which in the U.S. is typically four years.[3] In the U.S., apprenticeship programs are offered through the National Glass Association as well as trade organizations and local companies' associations. Construction-industry glaziers are members of the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades frequently.[1] In Ontario, Canada, apprenticeships are offered at the provincial level and qualified through the Ontario College of Trades.[5] Other provinces manage their own apprenticeship programs. [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glazing_(window)]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glazing_(window)[/url] The Trade of Glazier is a designated Red Seal Trade in Canada.[6] Occupational hazards[edit] Occupational hazards encountered by glaziers include the risks to be trim by glass or tools and falling from scaffolds or ladders.[1][3] The usage of heavy equipment may also cause damage: the Country wide Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) reported in 1990 that a journeyman glazier died within an industrial accident in Indiana after attempting to use a manlift to transport a thousand-pound case of glass which the manlift did not have capacity to transport.[7] In the United States[edit] According to the Occupational Outlook Handbook, there are a few 45,300 glaziers in america, with median pay of $38,410 per year in 2014.[3] Two-thirds of Glaziers work in the building blocks, structure, and building exterior contractors industry, with smaller amounts working in building provides and materials working, building finishing contracting, automotive maintenance and repair, and glass and cup product production.[2][3] Among the 50 states, only Connecticut and Florida require glaziers to carry a license.[3] See also[edit] Architectural glass Glazing in architecture Insulated glazing Stained glass Glass manufacturing Glassblowing |