The doors to Conference Room 1A slid gracefully to the side with a customary hiss of hydraulics.
Gerardo walked in, his yellow overalls tattered and covered with grease. The entirety of the station's staff watched him closely, as they huddled amongst themselves in the scarce floor space. He was late, but then accessing the damaged oxygen exhaust wasn't an easy chore; not that half of them would understand as much. Some looked at him incredulously, as if to say: "How dare you keep us waiting a second longer!"
The station's sensors had detected a breach on one of its many oxygen exhaust shafts, and of course, it was Gerardo who'd been sent to deal with the situation immediately. Whilst it wasn't vital that the shaft was in working order, it'd be a shitty move to leave it for the next shift to take care of.
"Sorry guys," Gerardo said, with a mock bow. "One does not crawl three hundred feet through a metal labyrinth without getting lost, map or no map."
Gerardo found that the exhaust fan's propellers had shattered into several pieces, and its frame had taken a nasty knock as well. This was not uncommon - the planet had a volatile surface, full of rock slides and tremors. Anything could have dislodged itself, rolled a few feet, and knocked the thing in. Either way, without launching an external operation to remove and replace the shaft's mouth, it wasn't getting fixed any time soon. Only odd thing was, Gerardo couldn't find the offending rock that had caused the damage in the first place.
"The shaft is fucked, to put it plainly," he said, wiping some thick grease from his brow. He shot Chief Engineer Tito a glance. "Unless you want to send me out there with a couple of guys, and a five tonner to lift the mouth up with. She'll need replacing, no two ways about it. Fan has completely shattered, and the struts have been warped too. No fucking idea what caused it though, couldn't find the offending rock. Could have been a minor tremor, maybe, that knocked the fan propellers out of alignment slightly, so that they struck the struts and wrecked everything."
Gerardo walked in, his yellow overalls tattered and covered with grease. The entirety of the station's staff watched him closely, as they huddled amongst themselves in the scarce floor space. He was late, but then accessing the damaged oxygen exhaust wasn't an easy chore; not that half of them would understand as much. Some looked at him incredulously, as if to say: "How dare you keep us waiting a second longer!"
The station's sensors had detected a breach on one of its many oxygen exhaust shafts, and of course, it was Gerardo who'd been sent to deal with the situation immediately. Whilst it wasn't vital that the shaft was in working order, it'd be a shitty move to leave it for the next shift to take care of.
"Sorry guys," Gerardo said, with a mock bow. "One does not crawl three hundred feet through a metal labyrinth without getting lost, map or no map."
Gerardo found that the exhaust fan's propellers had shattered into several pieces, and its frame had taken a nasty knock as well. This was not uncommon - the planet had a volatile surface, full of rock slides and tremors. Anything could have dislodged itself, rolled a few feet, and knocked the thing in. Either way, without launching an external operation to remove and replace the shaft's mouth, it wasn't getting fixed any time soon. Only odd thing was, Gerardo couldn't find the offending rock that had caused the damage in the first place.
"The shaft is fucked, to put it plainly," he said, wiping some thick grease from his brow. He shot Chief Engineer Tito a glance. "Unless you want to send me out there with a couple of guys, and a five tonner to lift the mouth up with. She'll need replacing, no two ways about it. Fan has completely shattered, and the struts have been warped too. No fucking idea what caused it though, couldn't find the offending rock. Could have been a minor tremor, maybe, that knocked the fan propellers out of alignment slightly, so that they struck the struts and wrecked everything."