The other story concerned a keen and very eager student who wanted to help repair some Watson Marlow blood pumps. He offered to change the bearings on the drive shaft and asked where the bearing puller was.
I told him that it was kept over at the stores (half a mile away from the central block) and could he ask Charlie (the foreman) for the glass hammer as well (couldn't resist a little practical joke).
Without a single question, he was off only to return half an hour later, dripping wet (it happened to be raining hard and I forgot to tell him about the interconnecting tunnels).
He stood forlornly and announced that Charlie wanted to know if we required the clear or the frosted one!!??
LOL , that's a Win!
Reminds me of a time I was getting a lot of calls to service a translate-rotate CT scanner and I was getting concerned because I always find the large plastic gears that are supporting the a lower steel chain section had popped out and fallen to the base of the CT.
My rad tech friend would nod solemnly while I explain that I need to check the machine thorougly and it'll take the rest of the day and to please cancel all CT procedures until we give the go-ahead to use the machine.
I would then reinsert the plastic gears (the procedure is the similar to putting a steel bicycle chain on to a bicycle chain ring or gear, only you position / hold the plastic gear and manually translate / rotate until it meshes in) and then check if there are any loose nuts/parts in the gantry. Everything checks out though.
It happened a couple more times and then the incidents stopped. It had been a puzzle for the service team.
About 10 years later, I met my friend (the rad tech) in a bar and he bought me a drink and then he apologized. It turned out he was seriously dating at the time and he would open the gantry and remove the gears so he can come home early to prepare for his date.
nope, I didn't strangle him as he kept the beers coming and he's still my friend. :-)