Looks Like The Laws of Supply and Demand Are Working

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The job should have taken me about 12 hours to change out the controls on all 22 units. Instead, I had to supervise (4) union people to change out the parts. There were (2) BEW people, a mechanical union worker and a foreman. The electricians and the mechanical guys had a 30 minute discussion on to who was responsible for removeing the THE TWO BOLTS (1/4-20's) that held the photoeye tray in place. Then they had another 45 minute discussion on to who was going to remove the (4) #6 screws that hold the cover on the electrical box. Then it was break time



LOL.....that is exactly what I had to deal with on just about every job.



Those guys I told to land the wires for the interconnect, there were about 15 wires labeled 1-15. I told them to just pick eight and renumber them with the numbers I gave them. It took them at least half the day just to decide which 8 wires they were going to use. These were being landed on Allen Bradley Relay Contacts which were already mounted in the panels.



After this issue was reported, the four guys were kicked off the project and we hired some others that knew how to do electrical work better.
 
Oil dropped again today. Looks like supply and demand is still working. Gas in my area dropped in the last week or so from $4.07 to around $3.87.



Oil's 2-week nosedive shows up at the pump



By ADAM SCHRECK, AP Business WriterFri Jul 25, 5:01 PM ET



Whether or not any bubble has burst, Americans now live in an economy where the prospect of a gallon of gas for less than $4 is cause for relief.



That barrier may be broken as early as this weekend, as a two-week nosedive in crude prices begins to ripple out to gas stations nationwide.



The national average for a gallon of regular pulled back to just above $4 a gallon and oil tumbled to its lowest point in weeks Friday on the belief that prices have yet to reflect just how badly demand has deteriorated in the United States, the world's thirstiest oil consumer.



Prices at the pump are poised to dip even further, and could cost as much as 25 cents less by Labor Day, AAA spokesman Geoff Sundstrom said.



"People say typically prices shoot up like a rocket, fall like a feather. But this time ... it looks like it's different," Sundstrom said. "The retail sector is interested in bringing these prices down as fast as they can to stimulate business in their convenience stores."



In the trading pits, oil continued on a two-week sell-off. Light, sweet crude for September delivery fell $2.23 to settle at $123.26 a barrel in on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier the contract dropped as far as $122.50, its lowest point since June 5.



Many analysts say the market's momentum points to further declines. Crude has fallen in seven of the last nine sessions, and is down more than 16 percent from its peak above $147 a barrel earlier this month.



"There's just nothing sufficiently bullish coming into the market right now to sustain a rally," said Jim Ritterbusch, president of energy consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates. "We're just seeing a new theme in which demand has become a very important part of the equation."



Still, prices remain about 65 percent higher than they were this time last year.



In the latest sign that Americans continue to struggle with soaring energy prices, filling station operators hungry for business ratcheted down the average price for a gallon of regular gas by 2 cents, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express.



Sundstrom said such a large decline suggests demand is fading. Retail prices have fallen about a dime per gallon in just the past week.



"We're seeing a historic change in driving habits," Sundstrom said, although he added that "we still have a long way to go before we get back to the comfort zone, if you will, for the consumer."



While all that talk on trading floors has shifted to demand worries, analysts note that prices could rebound on even a temporary cut to supply.



The abduction of five crew members from a Swedish boat in Nigeria's oil-producing Niger delta region was a reminder that much of the world's oil is still pulled from politically volatile regions. The African nation is a major supplier to the U.S. Earlier in the week, Nigerian militants threatened to blow up pipelines in the region within a month.



Investors are also watching for any sign in increased tension between Iran and the West.



"There is a palpable sense of exhaustion amongst traders after the steep sell-off of the past two weeks, and many think we are in for a period of stabilization," said Addison Armstrong, director of market research at Tradition Energy. "This notion is being supported by renewed concerns about events in Nigeria and the Middle East."



In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures fell 4.42 cents to settle at $3.5229 a gallon while gasoline futures lost 2.71 cents to finish at $3.0323 a gallon. Natural gas prices sank 23.9 cents to settle at $9.084 per 1,000 cub
 
And the laws of supply and demand continue to work :):



Oil hits 7-week low on demand worries, dollar gain



Tuesday July 29, 2:21 pm ET

By Stevenson Jacobs, AP Business Writer



Oil prices tumble to 7-week low as demand worries grow, US dollar strengthens



NEW YORK (AP) -- Oil prices tumbled to their lowest level in seven weeks Tuesday as a stronger dollar and beliefs that record prices are eroding the world's thirst for energy sparked another dramatic sell-off.



The drop -- as much as $4 a barrel during the day -- was a throwback to oil's nosedive over the past two weeks and outweighed supply concerns touched off by a militant attack Monday on two Nigerian crude pipelines. It was oil's seventh decline in the last 10 sessions.



Light, sweet crude for September delivery fell $1.89, or 1.52 percent, to $122.84 a barrel in early afternoon trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier, prices fell to $120.42, the lowest level for a front-month contract since June 10; they have now fallen more than $25 from their trading high of $147.27, reached July 11.



More concerns that crude's run-up over the past year has pushed prices to unsustainable levels fed Monday's decline. The U.S. Transportation Department said Monday that U.S. drivers logged 9.6 billion fewer vehicle miles in May -- or 3.7 percent -- compared to the same period last year, the biggest drop ever for the historically busy summer driving month.



And demand for oil in the U.S. -- the world's thirstiest consumer -- continues to fall, dropping by 891,000 barrels per day in May compared the same month a year ago, the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said Monday.



"We're seeing both statistical and anecdotal evidence of very rapidly weakening demand picture," said Jim Ritterbusch, president of energy consultancy Ritterbusch and Associates in Galena, Ill.



The declines accelerated after oil briefly dipped below $122, a key resistance level that triggered technical selling by computers programed to dump oil contracts once prices fall below a certain threshold. The next technical level traders are watching is $117.



"I think we could see $117 a barrel in a one-week time frame, and this market could eventually get to $100," Ritterbusch said.



Also weighing on prices was a sharply stronger dollar compared to the euro, which made commodities less attractive to investors who have bought oil futures as a hedge against inflation and weakness in the U.S. currency.



The euro bought $1.5557 compared with $1.5752 late Monday in New York.



"It looks like oil is selling off today with the very, very strong dollar and nothing to drive it higher. Quiet seems to be bearish these days," said Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Service in Wall, N.J.



In a further sign high prices are curbing Americans' consumption for fuel, retail gas prices fell further below the $4-a-gallon mark. The average price of a regular gas fell 1.7 cents to $3.941, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Prices Information Service and Wright Express.



Monday's attack in Nigeria targeted two pipelines believed to be owned by a unit of Royal Dutch Shell PLC and was the latest in a two-year campaign of attacks on the country's oil industry. Shell said a pipeline had been damaged in attacks and that some crude production had been shut down to prevent the oil from spilling into the environment.



The oil company said Tuesday it may not be able to fulfill some oil-export contracts because of the damage. Shell didn't specify how much oil production was cut by the attack or how long repairs would take.



The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta says it is acting to force the Nigerian federal government to send more oil industry funds to the southern region, which produces all of Nigeria's crude oil but<
 

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