Welding career anyone?
thanks again guys for the he4lp so far!
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to do it for a living. As trades go it's got a lot of
hazards and as far as conditions, down here in
Florida you see the welding being done in open
steel-roof sheds, you're all bundled up with no
cooling but a floor fan and it's 90+ degrees outside
and more like 100+ inside. Screw that. I can only
take 10-15 minutes in my shed and I need a
cool-off break. Ain't going to get that luxury when
you're on the time clock. No union down here
either. Just rednecks making sparks and getting
beat up old, early.

My guess would be that the $75-$100+/hr guys are the ones toting their own equipment to the job, and using their own supplies, providing their own insurance, etc. You can easily tie up a lot of money in a welding rig, and you gotta pay the bills, hence the higher hourly rate. Plus they likely have to plan for backup... if your rig breaks, you don't weld. If you don't weld, you don't get paid.
The lower pay rate (say $35-ish range) I would bet are for positions where the company supplies the tools and supplies. But yeah, hot work for sure, especially in Texas. But, there are a lot of jobs around here (I drive past a "Hiring MIG Weldors" sign every day at a local factory).
http://www.belch.com/welcome-to-world-wide-welding/
Maybe a wee bit pessimistic, but... worth reading!
If you are dead set on welding go with the pipe fitting route, I know several.
If you like working hours (7-12hr days) then its for you!
Its not uncommon for a welder to make 12-13K a month
The average pay rate for a pipe welder is around 35.00/ hr
Most jobs give your per diem which varies, 40-125.00 a day (TAX FREE)
Pipeline welders who have their own rig can make the 150.00 hr range.
Another bonus is that the projected outlook for welders are high.
The downfall would be limited advancement opportunities, bad eyes at an earlier age, heat.

My guess would be that the $75-$100+/hr guys are the ones toting their own equipment to the job, and using their own supplies, providing their own insurance, etc. You can easily tie up a lot of money in a welding rig, and you gotta pay the bills, hence the higher hourly rate. Plus they likely have to plan for backup... if your rig breaks, you don't weld. If you don't weld, you don't get paid.
The lower pay rate (say $35-ish range) I would bet are for positions where the company supplies the tools and supplies. But yeah, hot work for sure, especially in Texas. But, there are a lot of jobs around here (I drive past a "Hiring MIG Weldors" sign every day at a local factory).





