One of the benfits of working in the nuclear "industry" is that the standards are extremely high. I once shared a liftclub with a boilermaker who produced a short circuit plate for an RF resonant cavity the quality of which left me breathless. I mean this workpiece transcended the border between craftmanship and art. It was a thing of beauty.
Another mate of mine, a classic enthusiast, picked up a wrecked fastback commando and restored it. He ran the maintenance division at the nuclear institute concerned so when he wasn't in a state of mild panic he could do as he pleased (which was most of the time). Nuclear institutes, if you don't know, use a lot of stainless, so Geoff's Fastback had an instrument binnacle machined from billet stainless. Again it was a thing of beauty.
One collegue (I hesitate to call him a mate) was a superb machinist but had the habit of filing every machined surface of the workpiece and making it look like crap. Philistine!
Mike, the aforementioned boliermaker, turned his attention in the evenings to building a Lotus Seven and after its completion the joke running around was: "Why doesn't Mike's Lotus have windscreen wipers?". Answer: "They're not a stores issue".