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Question for professional welders

doodah man

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2012
Messages
84
Location
Philadelphia, PA
Hi all,

My wife is considering taking welding certification course at a local technical school. She's done some torch-and-rod welding in the past (art classes) and enjoyed it. She's detail oriented, crafty and tough, so I'm sure she'd be able to handle the job. What are the work prospects are for female welders? We're in Philadelphia if that makes a difference.

Thanks.
 
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Oldbear

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 31, 2011
Messages
620
Location
Linden, Alberta, Canada
Like most trades, she will have to be that much better then the men around her. ***** but is true. We have two female welders in a shop of 65 employees (around 24 are welders) and one of them is in the top five of our welders - she does all the aluminum - which many here don't have the hand or talent for.
 

kv501

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 14, 2010
Messages
613
We have 5 female welders out of roughly 45 in our plant. 3 have been there more than ten years; the others I don't know since moving to accounting 6 years ago. One thing I can say about or business is that we don't care about anything other than reliable attendance and welding talent. Let me emphasize reliable attendance. Located in NW Iowa.
 

Lynch3811

Member
Joined
Feb 6, 2012
Messages
8
Doodah Man if you find a class could you post what you come up with. Im also in the philly area and want to learn how to weld.
 

DonnyT

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 15, 2012
Messages
236
Location
Upstate
According to the numbers I have seen, there is a shortage of welders. I think she will do just fine if she has all the required certs.
 

Oldbear

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 31, 2011
Messages
620
Location
Linden, Alberta, Canada
We have 5 female welders out of roughly 45 in our plant. 3 have been there more than ten years; the others I don't know since moving to accounting 6 years ago. One thing I can say about or business is that we don't care about anything other than reliable attendance and welding talent. Let me emphasize reliable attendance. Located in NW Iowa.

We don't favor male/female either. Reliable attendance is a must, and the ability to square things...
 
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OldracerJones

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 20, 2012
Messages
334
Location
Chico, Texas
I ran a combustion repair shop for 10 years in Houston and have had many female welders. Most have a very good hand and strong attention to detail. If she comes to work regularly and works she will be fine.
 

1948

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 14, 2011
Messages
569
Location
IL WI border
all of the welding/fab shops that ive worked at didnt give one hoot about certs. all they wanted to see was your welds. you go in, they find some scrap metal, and they plop it down in front of you and tell you to tack and weld it together. they look at it, and then they either tell you youre hired, or they will call you later. one other thing they want to know, is if you can read a tape measure down to the 32nds! you must know decimal to fraction conversions, and it also helps if you can do machine work sometimes too. she must have no issues running large cutting machines too because you arent always welding sometimes you gotta get material ready. she will have to know how to read blueprints, so she will need to pick up a welding book with the different symbols in it. she will also need to know how to assemble things and make them straight, and how to spread her heat out so it doesnt warp. so i guess she could take a class, or she could checkout a book and read it and practice A TON.
 

LutzTD

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2011
Messages
3,673
Location
Lutz, Florida
Im taking an evening welding class right now. The full time student leave when we arrive. Looks like 10% are female. Its funny because they all look organized and like they are all busines. About 10% of the rest of the guys look as if they are as serious.
 

01ssreda4

Banned
Joined
Dec 15, 2011
Messages
567
School and certs mean **** honestly. Weld quality/ability is everything. My last job paid for my certs after they hired me. I had to bare wire a 5" sch 40 pipe, one root, and 5 caps. That's what got me in then they set up whatever else they wanted me to have.
 

DonnyT

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 15, 2012
Messages
236
Location
Upstate
all of the welding/fab shops that ive worked at didnt give one hoot about certs. all they wanted to see was your welds. you go in, they find some scrap metal, and they plop it down in front of you and tell you to tack and weld it together. they look at it, and then they either tell you youre hired, or they will call you later. one other thing they want to know, is if you can read a tape measure down to the 32nds! you must know decimal to fraction conversions, and it also helps if you can do machine work sometimes too. she must have no issues running large cutting machines too because you arent always welding sometimes you gotta get material ready. she will have to know how to read blueprints, so she will need to pick up a welding book with the different symbols in it. she will also need to know how to assemble things and make them straight, and how to spread her heat out so it doesnt warp. so i guess she could take a class, or she could checkout a book and read it and practice A TON.

In the construction industry, "No certs, NO WORK"
 
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