This has been an interesting read!
$10.00/$14.00
$14.00/$16.00
$16.00/$18.00
$18.00/$20.00
$20.00/$24.00
$24.00 and up
This has been an interesting read!
But on another note buying stuff for home or auto is not so easy and you must buy what you must buy.
Not too far off from here, but what is the cost of living there? Entry level house prices are going up again so take it for what it is worth, but most nice (not a dump, but not perfect) in nice neighborhoods here are shooting up to around $200k in the twin cities. Still having thoughts about moving somewhere warmer, but only to areas that have the demand for operator/setup/programmer with equal or better pay (depending on cost of living) to make the jump. Thankfully in the metro area here it is not too hard to find an open position.
Home prices are crazy in the Portland metro area, as are apartment prices. Entry level starter home is going to be $300K+ Average price in the City of Portland is running about $450K. The get into lower housing prices, you have to get well out of the metro area, but that increases your commute time and cost. Overall cost of living is not too bad compared to some other places, there is no sales tax in Oregon....yet. State income tax is high, top rate is 10%. Property taxes compared to other metro areas aren't too bad. The climate is generally mild, warmish winters with minimal snow and mild summers. A lot of rain normally, a near record of about 45 inches this year so far, average is about 35 inches. Overall not a bad place to live.
Thank you very much for the interesting post. I recommend washington news if you intend to continue to follow this kind of news. Where the latest news can be read.
I am in the philly area a nd my expiernced operators are getting 22-24 dollars per hour. They are responsible for inspecting all parts and tweaking some offsets.
i was contacted by a company in philadelphia a few years ago they had a set rate of $18 for CNC operators which is not unreasonable if you ask me you'd be lucky if you had a job really
robots are gonna replace operators everywhere sooner or later
look at a mazak factory in japan for example. it's not something kids nowadays wanna get into it's not an aspiring career.
What I don't understand is why machinist pay is so low compared to the other trades. As an electrician or plumber, and some of the other trades you can easily make $100K plus/year. The skill set is different, but the knowledge required is at about the same level. I'm not talking about button pushers here, but rather setup machinists, even the tool & die trade pay is below the other trades at that level of skill and experience.
Jim Dawson
Sandy, Oregon, USA
hello, the poll is missing the 2-5$/hour category ...
jim, maybe is a good idea to open a new thread about that; if you ask me, i would have some kind of ideas, but it begins with this :
... in small shops, that are at the begining, few employers know what set of skills is required; there is the idea that the "machine is doing it all, alone"
... in bigger shops, still few employers know what set of skills is required, but there is an established market for their products, so there is a constant income, and salaries are generally fix; however, such bigger shops are recently being affected by the crysis of personal, and, if you are good, you may negotiate your salary, but still, the problem is that a qualified person can not work with less-qualified employees, so he may not get the money that he wishes to get, or he may get upset seeing that low qualified persons earn too much
... and there are the persons that have acumulated enough experience, to be able to manage a production line; of course, their experiences may be different, because it depends in what kind of machining enviroment they have grown, but generally they are able to learn / understand things pretty fast; from this last category, there are persons that are in the right place, where the stars align at least 50%, and also others that decide to start their own shop
of course, i have also asked me the same question, and, in time, i have observed that the ones that earn high numbers, are doing something, or are inside a shop, were a few things are done differently, and this is not always connected with the level of skill&experience / kindly
Ladyhawke - My Delirium, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_bFO1SNRZg
I would totally jump at a career of repairing “Robots”.
“Robots are good people”.
Just as long as I can continue troubleshooting and providing maintenance to CNC machines.
*When a robot crashes a machine, I can say whatever I want, and never be called into the office because I hurt someone’s feelings... when I said “Use your brain” when pointing at the part drawing and focusing on the tolerances.”
Just be a great operator and take care of your machine and make good parts. Become a Robot and you won’t be replaced.
I agree. $14.80 was the calculation I arrived at and recently presented based on a minimum wage of $16 per hour.
What drove the wage down was the choices made by the employee.
The amount of time you pay for “nothing” within a 8 hour shift.
They know the rules and the standards. Their choice.
I started about 14 months ago at $11 per hour.
Because I worked my butt off, and my personal production was of note and put the company way ahead and the year end target was now a tangible objective... I now make $19 per hour.
I’m a operator and maintenance guy. Nothing special.
But I can say with certainty... there are many working as operators that shouldn’t. “it’s simply not the job for you.”
Since I became 2nd Shift Supervisor...
I have a very basic rule. I will train you and if at the end of 90 days, you cannot meet the minimum requirements and minimum standards and have solid grasp of your job as operator .... if you cannot do this at the end of 90 days... sorry but this isn’t the job for you.
Here we pay about $8 - $12 per hour for our CNC operators, depends on their skill and experiment.
http://cncmakers.com/cnc/controllers/CNC_Controller_System/CNC_Retrofit_Package.html