Gonna be a welder

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Well a few months back I asked what you guys did for a living so I could get an idea of what I want to do. I think i've decided on being a welder. Any welders out their? How do you like the work? Is their any social interaction throughout your workday?
 
Its a great field. I worked in the power industry all my life and my Dad was a welder for 35 years. Many people tell me he was the best welder in the old GPU.Met Ed Electrical System in Pa.)system. My dad told me that some can weld and others can't...its a gift.

Its a great field.
 
Ask your question in the tool forum over at garagejournal and I bet a few of the pro welders will chime in.
 
I've worked in some job shops doing subcontract work for Navy shipbuilders and FAA overhaul and repair. Certified welders were well paid @ that time (1987-95)
 
Do you have any experience at this time? If so, what type of welding? Also are you attending a welding school now? Welding is a broad field, with many differant applications. I have welded for 37 years, ranging from Navy ship building(some of the finest welders around work on Navy ships)to boiler shops and outside structal welding, to 24 years welding in a machine shop with all types of alloys with all forms of welding. Tig, stick, mig, submerged arc, even metalizing. Welding for a long career takes a person that is patient(it takes many years to master the trade), willing to learn from those with experience, endure the occasional hardships, and have very good hand, eye, and with tig welding, foot coordination. Even though I am now retired, I have my own tig, stick and mig welders that I do some speciality work with alum, stainless, cast iron, bronze, and steel which I command a very good rate of pay for. Also my old shop calls me in for some types of welding. In fact I have worked for them this week. Bottom line: I have made a very good living for my family and myself, and enjoy a comfortable semi retirement from my career as a welder.(Actually I don't need to work at all but rocking chairs aren't for me). I wish you well.

https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=2468438&page=1
Here is a recent job I did at my shop.
 
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Originally Posted By: tig1
(some of the finest welders around work on Navy ships)


My late Grandmother was a welder in the Tampa shipyards during WWII. She used to say she was so good, the foremen would argue to get her on their crew...

Once, when she was in her late 80's, I asked her if she thought she could still run a bead. She reckoned she could! lol
 
I weld and work at a welding shop but am not employed as a "welder" there. I think welding is an outstanding skill and you can always find a job welding.

Really pay attention to what tig1 is saying. Basically be versatile and learn everything you can within the realm of welding.

My advice would be to look at the welding as a skill in your toolbox. Learn the skills of metal fabrication and you'll be even more valuable. A guy who just knows how to run a good bead on steel is a dime a dozen, still in demand, but not as valuable ($$$).

One thing you'll learn is how physically and mentally demanding it is. Not because you are lifting or moving a bunch of weight but because you are intensely focused on your work and training your muscles to operate the torch/gun/stinger.
 
Chainblu,

I was watching Nightly Business Report on PBS yesterday and they had a segment on women welders attending a vocational school learning the trade.

Is welding a stable career when the economy slows down ?
 
I welded some back in high school which was about 5 years ago. I'm gonna go back to school to be what they call a combination welder. Which is to learn the main three types. Stick, TIG and pipe welding iirc.
 
Originally Posted By: motor_oil_madman
I welded some back in high school which was about 5 years ago. I'm gonna go back to school to be what they call a combination welder. Which is to learn the main three types. Stick, TIG and pipe welding iirc.


Mig is a must as well.
 
Had a uncle that was a welder and millwright and always seemed to be able to get a job and made a good living at it. I'd try to get as many certifications so that you will be able to have more choices of jobs.
 
I worked 3:30- midnight at the Fore River Shipyard . There were several lady welders. Rosemary was a 2nd generation yard bird. Her welding looked like a row of dimes . The German women were expected to raise cannon fodder. In the US, women built the machines to bomb Germany and Japan back to the stone age.
 
Originally Posted By: LT4 Vette
Chainblu,

I was watching Nightly Business Report on PBS yesterday and they had a segment on women welders attending a vocational school learning the trade.

Is welding a stable career when the economy slows down ?


Who do you think maintains the oil industry? Who's plumbing big buildings and repairing boilers? Who keeps the agriculture, heavy equipment, and transportation industries going?

Welding can't be outsourced and it can't be dumbed down. Automation is replacing people in factory jobs but it'll always take a human to do custom and repair work. Someone on-site will always need to know the difference between AC and DC, 6010 and 7018, Short circuit and Spray Arc, 80 amps and 400 amps.
 
Not to be the negative here, but my bro's father in law and he is a welder. The fumes etc associated with welding are not conducive to good respiratory health. He has big problems associated with it, so much he won't see 58.
 
Yeah cancer is one thing i'm worried about with this career. The days of picking one career and sticking with it for 40 years is pretty isn't very common anymore so probably after 8-10 years i'd move on to something else. Hopefully that amount of time won't affect my lifespan.
 
Practice! Practice! Practice! I do a lot of stick, lead and plastic welding for work and if layoff stick or plastic for any period of time I'm usually not satisfied with my first efforts.
 
Practice! Practice! Practice! I do a lot of stick, lead and plastic welding for work and if layoff stick or plastic for any period of time I'm usually not satisfied with my first efforts.
 
There's lots of good information already up.

I can join metal sufficiently well for yard work, but have had the pleasure of watching some absolute master craftsmen in action on equipment that I've been the engineer in charge of.

Spent an hour watching one TIG expert manufacture new blade tip tenons on a steam turbine (english and german blade fitters reckon his work was best in world, including their factory technicians) in 410 stainless, and weld 410 stainless coverband back together with inconel...at the end of the hour, I was fatigued, and he was working 12 hour shifts...gets phonecalls from all over the country.

Another boiler job, I watch two guys welding pressure tube, one on the torch, one feeding wire. One of them I've seen put the root run in on the back of a tube, while he watched the action through a hole he burned through the front of the weld prep...his welds pass radiography 95% of the time...neither of them have any formal qualifications, the turbine guy does.

A friend's husband makes a living working at a workshop that

Also seen qualified guys fail at a hand rail test.

To give an idea of the demand, the welding codes in Oz allow people with no qualifications whatsoever weld on pressure equipment and structures, as long as they pass the tests, keep doing that work at least once every 3 months, and work under a certificated supervisor...must also "qualify" by sample weld subject to destructive testing on each weld procedure (combination of materials, thicknesses, positions, and arrangements).

It's a fascinating field.

But you need to decide what you want to do.
Boilermaking (plate work and fabrication of big steel stuff);
Precious welding (pressure welding on certified vessels);
Factory/production (combinations of those above);
Hardfacing, for construction and mining equipment;
Field specialty work (like power stations);
Newer fields like plastic.

While ever there is a coal fired power station, there will be a need for guys who can be on site in 12 hours, work 10 days straight 12 hours per day, while hanging upside down on a swinging stage 50 feet up in the air.

While our waterways become depleted, we need more water treatment equipment, and people who can stick high end stainless together without creating rust spots.

With a massively aging fleet of power stations, we need people who can cut out and replace welds in 30" pipes, 4" think in mongrel materials like 1/2Cr, 1/2Mo, 1/4V, where the welds age at twice the rate as the pipe.

Keep something else up your sleeve 'though, as many of the precious welded that I know never retire as welders. Their eyes go, they lose the mobility to crawl 30' through 2' crawl spaces across 6" spaced 2" tubes
 
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