Five Things Commercial Dive Schools Might Not Tell You

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  • čas přidán 23. 07. 2018
  • I accidentally erased this video a few days ago, so I'm re-uploading it now. Sorry if there was any inconvenience.
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Komentáře • 303

  • @DiabloOutdoors
    @DiabloOutdoors Před 2 lety +16

    You forgot MANY things....
    1) You think that you're a tough guy? Wait till they send you in a water tower for inspection. Most of you will turn down trust me. You have to climb a ladder and...climb...and climb. Then you have to haul your gear to the top. And IF you survive this, you then need to gear up and fit in hole too small for a mice. Once inside it's pitch black. And you have to be careful not to be dragged in the hole at the bottom...
    2) If you go sat dive. You *absolutely* need to buy and bring a safe with you in the bell. Why? One guy stays inside, two guys out. The guy inside gets to eat ALL the sandwiches. No sandwich in a safe, not sandwich.
    3) You will often feel "something" bumping on you. Sometimes.. a BIG something.
    4) Current can be so strong at some locations that you'll do the flag quit often and even the most experienced and toughest diver may refuse that dive.
    5) Don't go to Indonesia, those commercial divers are diving in a cheap overall made of cotton!
    6) The deeper you go, the more wet the water is.
    7) Never pee in your own dry or wet suit. Only in the rental ones or your friends ones.
    8) You can go train in Houston for nuclear reactor dives. You'll then be ready for Halloween at all time. Green skin, 6 fingers and a ear on your forehead within a week.
    9) Sex underwater? a must! ..at your own risk tho.

  • @briansullivan1621
    @briansullivan1621 Před rokem +10

    Hello everyone
    Been inland diving for 29 years . The school cost me $5,300.
    I’ve spent years in swells , very strong currents, zero & very low visibility, being covered in mud , epoxies , oil , creosote hundreds of stings from jellyfish, cut & smashed fingers, burned from hot water machine , chemical burns from concrete & creosote.
    Been in the water hundreds of times after heavy rains with half treated sewage floating by.
    Another wonderful part of the job is when everything is frozen in the winter.
    I primarily work in the nyc metro area so 2 &3 hour commutes & hundreds of dollars a month spent on tolls is not uncommon.
    If i could go back I would of gone to a trade high school then went in the coast guard or Navy & then maybe some different trade like plumbing or electrical or got a job in law enforcement or on like a freight railroad.
    I also regret not ever going offshore so if i was able to start over in diving i would definitely go offshore for valuable life experience for at least 3-5 years.

  • @madams1690
    @madams1690 Před 3 lety +23

    As an owner of a civil diving company everything this young man said was right on point. Dive schools are a business and make their money turning and burning students. The main point that was missing in his list is within the first year after students leave dive school 83% will not be working in this field. After the second year only 7% of all the divers who attended school will still be in the field. If you don’t believe this stat go back and see his point about the census bureau amount of working divers currently. Somewhere around 3500! Add up the main four schools plus the 6-10 fringe schools and see how many graduate each year, then multiply that by 5 years for a total amount of “qualified” divers. The number is going to be much much greater than the under 4K commercial divers actually working. Good luck it can be a challenging and rewarding profession but you must stay humble and put the work in.

    • @IHWKR
      @IHWKR Před 8 měsíci +2

      Okay, I'd wager most of those people either don't have good work ethics or have an inflated idea that a fresh rookie is suitable for sat diving oil rigs for 6 figures. I'm the guy willing to put in the entry-level "bitch work" to prove I'm a reliable and trustworthy asset for my team. With experience comes marketability, and if that company won't advance your career, another one will. People do leave all the time whether to find something more family friendly, they hate it, or anything else. The bottom line is that it means open positions.
      I for one am willing and able to put in the time and effort for training and doing the entry-level "bitch work." I understand the significance of it and I wouldn't trust the system any other way.
      The people who can't handle or grasp these simple concepts shouldn't be working in this industry in the first place.
      I understand in a capitalist society that companies and schools are for-profit. Even Ivy-league schools push bullshit degrees that make no money. No one should expect anything different from any other institution of a less prestigious and recognized education than the aforementioned.
      It comes down to the will-power to get yourself into a careerfield you want to be in. The old saying if there's a will, there's a way. And if there isn't, make one.

  • @jonathanbradley4896
    @jonathanbradley4896 Před 3 lety +27

    Blows me away how shafted American divers are. 11 bucks an hour starting? 25 an hour average?
    My god, straight out of school in Canada you're on at least 30 an hour, most guys I know are on 40-50 an hour.
    I won't get wet for less than 30 an hour, that's insulting to a prefession that is inherently dangerous and very hard on the body.

  • @briansullivan1621
    @briansullivan1621 Před rokem +5

    Diving is kind of what you make it .
    A lot of people can talk the talk but when they can walk the walk they will get good paying work

  • @joshsimpson10
    @joshsimpson10 Před 5 lety +69

    Well all commercial divers are gonna be qualified space force mechanics!

    • @mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284
      @mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284 Před rokem

      Space is a myth, kindleloche. Wake up.

    • @joshsimpson10
      @joshsimpson10 Před rokem

      @@mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284 the aether is the medium in which the ISS is sitting. So ya "space" as in a void is bullshit.
      If you think the earth is flat you need to wake up and answer the question what is a torroid, a hyperbaloid and what does that have to do with the geometry of the earth

    • @mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284
      @mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284 Před rokem

      @josh simpson your sooo stupid, I said space is a myth and u pull flat earth right outta ur ignorant arse
      Good day to u sir. Peace.

    • @joshsimpson10
      @joshsimpson10 Před rokem +2

      @@mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284 the vast majority of people who say space is a myth are flat earthers lol you are full of enlightenment and substance

    • @mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284
      @mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284 Před rokem

      @@joshsimpson10 the majority of people are ignorant, like u. Peace. Enjoy ur life.

  • @maelstrom4552
    @maelstrom4552 Před 4 lety +35

    Excellent vision of our profession , it’s everything I tell people who ask about the job , still no regrets , fits me like a glove

    • @DFizzle420ify
      @DFizzle420ify Před 2 lety +1

      so is the pay really shit and the jobs scarce? im thinking about the school but this dweeb scares me

    • @DFizzle420ify
      @DFizzle420ify Před 2 lety

      thanks for the feed back 🙄

    • @moaipo7171
      @moaipo7171 Před 2 lety

      @@DFizzle420ify you find anymore info?

    • @anatoliygolub5609
      @anatoliygolub5609 Před 2 lety +2

      @@DFizzle420ify yes it really does suck. applied to 15 companies out of school and highest paying job was 18hr job/13hr shop. made just under 30k this last year. only people that make it are ones that gave up on life and have no future goals.

    • @anatoliygolub5609
      @anatoliygolub5609 Před 2 lety +4

      I watched these videos before going to school thinking "man this dude is just a dweeb, I can do this" nope... should've listened. everything he says is absolutely true

  • @briansarah2745
    @briansarah2745 Před 3 lety

    Watching you guys down there on CZcams scares the shit out of me you guys have balls thank you for the video and good luck man

  • @richardjohnston2904
    @richardjohnston2904 Před 4 lety +19

    Much of what was said is relating to inland diving. We have no problem placing people at The Ocean Corp. Yes you start out as a tender in the Gulf and the pay is around $18/hour however, you are working/getting paid 12 hours/7 days a week. Like many jobs you have to pay your dues and work once out of school. Yes inland divers dive sooner than Gulf divers but that doesn't mean you won't get wet right out of school. Most companies start new guys on more shallow, less complex dives. Yes there is limited and zero visibility diving in the gulf but its not as bad as inland. I don't lie to any perspective students and let them know if they want to be a gulf diver they pretty much have to move to south La, its hard on relationships and it is hard work. Its what you make it. If you make good money but hate your job you wont have a very good quality of life.

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 3 lety +9

      I'm curious how often you follow up with the guys you place.

    • @AZ-kr6ff
      @AZ-kr6ff Před rokem +6

      @@TheSaltyDiver
      About as often as he follows up with CZcams comments.

    • @solomonstello
      @solomonstello Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@AZ-kr6ffspeak for yourself.

  • @mikehamer1091
    @mikehamer1091 Před 2 lety +23

    I’ve been accepted to a school in Huston and a school in Seattle, I’ve wanted to do this for years but why are careers like this not rewarded highly based on risk and skill?

  • @ikejohnson3660
    @ikejohnson3660 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the frank assessment of the stuff that doesn't appear in the dive school ads.

  • @kaiyote4717
    @kaiyote4717 Před 5 lety +8

    Thanks for the tips man. And for getting to the point

  • @robinlawson2145
    @robinlawson2145 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for your time sir!

  • @davidmckinsey9276
    @davidmckinsey9276 Před 4 lety +6

    If you want to be a commercial diver, you should consider becoming a union millwright. I joined my hall about 2 years ago. They will train you for free, and diving is one of the things we do. As a union millwright, you don't have to worry about finding work if diving gets slow, they will find other work for you. Also, you will never have to work for $11/hr. or any nonsense like that.

    • @Ib90
      @Ib90 Před 4 lety +1

      @David McKinsey What's your email, I cant afford these 30k schools without guaranteed jobs.

    • @mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284
      @mihalispsychedelicrealeyes1284 Před rokem

      Which local are u in?

    • @briansullivan1621
      @briansullivan1621 Před rokem

      Union is the way to go
      That’s great to be a millright & diver & all your benefits follow you
      I’ve worked with some guys from an upstate ny local that were millrights & divers .
      Good strategy

  • @sainteven9244
    @sainteven9244 Před 4 lety +15

    Hmm. I was interested in commercial diving for the impression I would be making good money, could travel, would involve some risk, could stay fit, all the while having some job security. It seems the reality is that there aren't many jobs, and the pay is not good... Dunno if it's for me.

  • @seanunderwood4763
    @seanunderwood4763 Před 3 lety +1

    Glad I found this video, the money was one of the biggest things I looked for in wanting a career

  • @BushCampingTools
    @BushCampingTools Před 3 lety +5

    Delta P, look out, there's an accident about! Seriously good appraisal you give here. CZcams has seemingly made this type of vocation somewhat "romantic" When I was young enough to train for this and scuba diving a lot, like three times or more per week; my neighbour, who I finally got to talk with (I saw him a lot but we never spoke more than a few words) told me he was driving a bus. He didn't look like any bus driver LOL and he wasn't. He told me he used to be a saturation diver on oil rigs (he had retired and was 50? at the time of retirement) and said he had bad knees which he reckon was from all of that commercial diving. I think one has to plan ahead carefully for retirement because it's not a job one can work till they are 65 (maybe so9me exceptions out there).

  • @dom3354
    @dom3354 Před 5 lety +9

    Based off my experience you are absolutely correct on every topic you spoke about . I was lucky to have had a lot of construction , mechanical , military experience prior to working for a Dive company in a environmental division prior to going to dive school...then went back to the same company and easing into it ...I was able to jump back and fourth until I was a full time union diver. This was back in the 90’s and early 2000’s . The attrition rate the first month or two is high ..higher than any job I know of.

    • @gagesterboy
      @gagesterboy Před rokem +1

      how can one become a union diver?

  • @shannonjudson9629
    @shannonjudson9629 Před 5 lety +8

    Just found your channel while doing some research on commercial diving schools. I graduated from a four year welding apprentice course and was looking into adding commercial diving to expand my opportunities after i retire from my full time job (law enforcement). listening to your comments about the salary I'm wondering if its worth it. It still looks interesting to me, are there many opportunities on the east coast?

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety +3

      There is a lot of turnover in the industry, and a few hundred new dive school graduates every month. So jobs are out there. If you come from a law enforcement background you might look into public safety diving. That would probably be a more stable career course and honestly probably more lucrative.

  • @deanwinchester9684
    @deanwinchester9684 Před 4 lety

    Hi, thks buddy ! I will begin in my school diving in France this year, so thks for your advice men 👌🤙

  • @adiyanebenezer9454
    @adiyanebenezer9454 Před 5 lety +5

    Working in the water world is my calling, still working-out funding and I am confident its gonna be a flying start for me this year

    • @Loug522
      @Loug522 Před 5 lety

      For me, sat dive is one of the most interesting jobs, but I will probably end up having to go with the popular scuba diving(not that big of a sacrifice) instead just for being easier to find jobs. :(

    • @theseanman7478
      @theseanman7478 Před 4 lety +1

      kirby morgan sounds like it would be good for me lol

  • @sarahsayshello9726
    @sarahsayshello9726 Před 5 lety +28

    Jesus. Shit just got real. Yea thank you. I knew some of this but i didn't realize there was so many of us..

  • @devinjr42
    @devinjr42 Před 2 lety +2

    Do you think it’s worth the money for saturation diving school at the Houston Ocean Corp?

  • @vdubvance
    @vdubvance Před 2 lety +2

    Something you missed, Is it's work... hard work. especially the potable side, hauling your gear up mountains and towers...

    • @nicholashaindl7940
      @nicholashaindl7940 Před 2 lety +1

      I hear you there man, I've been working potable now for about 7 months, a lot of divers joke around and call it sissy work, but they have no idea the logistics this job calls for sometimes. rigging up all the equipment and diving on stand pipes and hydrosphere's is no joke, you have to be creative sometimes to make things work.

  • @sometexanguy9054
    @sometexanguy9054 Před 4 lety

    Do you weld under water salty diver? Or are you more maintenance, and how deep do you dive?

  • @jeevanjeeva6026
    @jeevanjeeva6026 Před 4 lety +1

    Bro I am interested in under water welding course which is the better institute to join

  • @sailingserendipity4046
    @sailingserendipity4046 Před 5 lety +1

    What are your thoughts on Commercial Diving Technologies in Hudsonville FL, and and IDI in Charleston SC? I am 45 years old and I've been a "sport/rescue" diver for 35 years and hold a Masters Captains license through the USCG. Do you think I'm wasting my money and time? Thank you for all of your interesting videos!

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety +3

      I've had many conversations with those guys down at Commercial Diving Technologies. They have all come off to me as honest and straight up guys. 45 does seem a little old to get into the career, but I think the master captain license may make up for it, that's a solid qualification. My best friend went to IDI, he enjoyed it. They seem to have a solid program as well. If you choose to do it I would probably swing for Hudsonville, but I think either is a good choice.

  • @brucedemchek3002
    @brucedemchek3002 Před 3 lety +6

    You can add #6 "I don't know why you did this. You're too old. But I took all your money." The Ocean Corp

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah, I get asked this question a lot. I never tell anyone what to do, but I make strong suggestions. I'd guess about 80% of the people I've talked to have completely ignored me, nobody has messaged me yet to say, "I told ya so."

    • @Tmusselman10
      @Tmusselman10 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheSaltyDiver what is too old? I'm 29 and about to go to school but this has me scared along with finding a job not being a veteran.

  • @WilburTheAtheist
    @WilburTheAtheist Před 3 lety

    How hard is it to get into the rigging side specifically?

  • @dylbinawesomeperson
    @dylbinawesomeperson Před 3 lety +2

    I have no interest in becoming a commercial diver but I’m getting recommend so many commercial diving videos

  • @edeonefr.7945
    @edeonefr.7945 Před rokem

    Nice information, srry if I may ask. In that diver school, hw they going to teach u al the courses, e.g., underwater welding diver, offshore air diver, inshore diver, harbour diver... pls reply me🙏

  • @gabriel1985666
    @gabriel1985666 Před 3 lety

    Thnak you a lot on info in a short time

  • @davepicard4476
    @davepicard4476 Před 5 lety

    thanks for the info

  • @Vidis88
    @Vidis88 Před 5 lety +2

    Being away from family is the hardest part I think.

  • @sarahsayshello9726
    @sarahsayshello9726 Před 3 lety

    Since there's alot of travel my idea was to just get an rv. Before I drop the cash on this can anyone in the industry tell if me if this is as good of an idea as I think it is or is it just dumb?
    I rather like the idea of not having an apartment and always being close(ish) to my books. So it seems like a grand idea to me. Any advice on this matter would be highly appreciated

    • @JA-rn5qv
      @JA-rn5qv Před 3 lety

      You travel quite a distance if you want to stay actively employed, thousands of miles back and forth. Best bet is to live as light, simple, and ready to travel on the drop of a dime. RV will seriously weigh you down and between maintenance costs and the amount of $ you will be forking out for fuel with all of the long distance travel that you must be willing to do, you're much better off just living simple, no RV, and hop a plane to each new job location. Just do some research on your next job destination each time and then figure out the best way to live cheap there so that when you arrive you already know where to go.

  • @sivonparansun
    @sivonparansun Před 3 lety

    Cool video! I had no idea the pay was so low tho

  • @Foco3018
    @Foco3018 Před 4 lety +6

    Hey Salty,
    I’m 42 years old and wonder if I’m too old to go to dive school. What are your thoughts or advice. I’m in good shape I’ve been a fighter in my 20s and coach now in my 30s to present.

    • @sgfpat
      @sgfpat Před 4 lety +3

      You'll have a hard time finding a job at that age

    • @juancamaney3562
      @juancamaney3562 Před 4 lety +2

      I met this dude that was around 60 years of age , He was a mean commercial diver from hell , he broke out as a commercial diver in the north sea , he didn't ask any young guys for anything , if he wanted do something , he would go and do it . Right now I'm 49 years I'm a jack of all trades and a fucking commercial diver .

    • @sgfpat
      @sgfpat Před 4 lety

      @kirby morgan well that's your opinion explain that to 6 if my friends that are 45 plus that never dove out of dive school. Ther previous company I worked for all the supervisors were 45 plus and were still in rotation. But that's one out of 4 companies

    • @randyneilson7465
      @randyneilson7465 Před rokem

      Yes you're too old to get started. Unless you want to be a tender or rack operator etc

  • @Jac-pd3kr
    @Jac-pd3kr Před 4 lety +2

    I gotta believe it’s better than 30 yrs in the trucking business.i haul LPG around Florida & make around $65,000 year

    • @F1reL1nk
      @F1reL1nk Před 3 lety

      Hey brother, I'm wanting haul too I'm also from Florida. I got. A year left on contract before i get out of the military. Any insight you can give me, advice?

  • @prasanths4105
    @prasanths4105 Před 4 lety

    Can you please recommend a commercial diving school in india

  • @MegaSlayerr
    @MegaSlayerr Před 4 lety +21

    so your telling me pipe welders on land, make more money that welders underwater lol why do people work in these places makes no sense lol

    • @clayjones1933
      @clayjones1933 Před 4 lety +4

      Yea it doesn't make sense! Why not have a good paying job, and then go diving in your spare time. I work as a millwright in a papermill and make well over 30 an hour. I guess if it's what you love then it makes sense!

    • @williamd7161
      @williamd7161 Před 4 lety +3

      Because most people believes that commercial divers are well compensated so its a sort of bragging right that your're a commercial diver specially if they're trying to impress Narcissistic Chic.

    • @jebbarrett1681
      @jebbarrett1681 Před 4 lety +7

      Yup I was a pipe welder before going to dive school and spent 11 years diving . I can tell you if it’s money your after stay dry. If it’s something your passionate about and are willing to put the time in get wet. Also it will be hard on a relationship so I wouldn’t recommend if you have a family. Just my two cents.

    • @jebbarrett1681
      @jebbarrett1681 Před 4 lety

      Anyname willdo yup you gotta really love the job. Its a job not many people do so no matter what you will be the most interesting person in the room and everyone will be interested in your stories lol. Plus it gets you laid like no tomorrow, just sayin

  • @lifeincognito2829
    @lifeincognito2829 Před rokem +1

    I am at the divers institute of technology. We were told after school we would get hired and would start off making 80 to 85 a year. But we are learning about underwater welding and saturation diving not commercial.

    • @gagesterboy
      @gagesterboy Před rokem

      im starting at dit in the october class i wanna go into offshore diving, is it worth it??

    • @jeremyn4397
      @jeremyn4397 Před rokem

      How did DIT work out for ya?

  • @ivanalvarezzz
    @ivanalvarezzz Před 5 lety +2

    I’ve been looking into commercial diving, currently in my senior in high school in the LA of California any tips ideas, school choices ? As far from what’s said in this video

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety +2

      Santa Barbara community college

    • @DogDamour
      @DogDamour Před 4 lety

      there is a school in San Diego also, NUPI

    • @johnusavage3051
      @johnusavage3051 Před 4 lety +2

      Don't do it. I started a dive business in FL with zero schooling making minimum $150 hourly working on and cleaning the bottom of boats. Could never understand why anyone would want to be a hat diver? Less money, loss of life higher along with busting balls.

    • @glardian966
      @glardian966 Před 3 lety

      @@johnusavage3051 What would be the name of your profession? How do I get into it?

    • @johnusavage3051
      @johnusavage3051 Před 3 lety +1

      @@glardian966 Boat hull cleaning that also includes replacing anodes (zincs usually), prop pulling, in-water fiberglass repair, recovering things and providing video of work performed. First, you have to reside near water. Salt water preferably although zebra muscles are now in fresh water. They act like hydraulic cement: very hard to scrape off. Next, buy equipment, insurance and start advertising on FB, Craigslist, flyers at marinas and boat stores and your own website. Before going out on your own you may want to work for a boat hull cleaning business to learn a few things.

  • @gopikrishna9647
    @gopikrishna9647 Před 11 měsíci

    Hey bro
    What is your opinion about scuba diving as a career

  • @gagesterboy
    @gagesterboy Před rokem

    hey salty, did you go to santa barbara community college? and are you an inland diver? or an offshore diver?

  • @nick_s-fl6fq
    @nick_s-fl6fq Před 4 lety

    Can anyone tell me any good schools for commercial diving in Europe??

  • @njp101
    @njp101 Před 4 lety +1

    Man - I REALLY LOVE DIVING and want to do that job. I hate my job now. But I have a wife and four kids and it sounds like this wouldn't pay the bills and it would be hard to find work. ...too bad.

  • @FGuilt
    @FGuilt Před 6 lety

    does your company specialize? Like, do inland companies generally cater to specific jobs like one does water towers, another does powerplants, another does bridge inspection, dredging and salvage, etc or are most of em pretty broad in terms of services offered? I always thought it would be cool to do the water tower stuff.

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 6 lety

      From what I understand, most inland companies do have a specialization. We do structural inspections, but there is a lot of different stuff out there. Underwater weed removal, the water tower stuff. On some random chance we ran into another completely different dive team in LA that did something with paper-mills.

  • @Michael-tc6vj
    @Michael-tc6vj Před 5 lety

    Hey guys this may be an unrelated question, but if ive had an ACL surgery meaning metal screws in my knee, would i still be able to do Wet welding or will the current damage and dissolve the screws

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety

      Man, that is a super interesting question. I'm going to ask someone and get back to you.

    • @Michael-tc6vj
      @Michael-tc6vj Před 5 lety

      @@TheSaltyDiver thanks very much bro, i definitely appreciate it

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety

      A source with ADCI tells me you're fine. "Nope he is fine. The screw would have to be grounded and since it is covered by meat, skin and most of the time a wet suit it will not ground out. I have had rods in my lower back for years."

    • @Michael-tc6vj
      @Michael-tc6vj Před 5 lety

      @@TheSaltyDiver thanks so much i appreciate the feedback, i was concerned about it because i was reading about the issues with Metal fillings in teeth but what you said makes sense.

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety +1

      Oh, the thing with the teeth has to do with air being trapped behind the fillings. It will expand and contract based on your depth and could cause a lot of pain. I believe it's called a tooth squeeze.

  • @nitinbhangalia6628
    @nitinbhangalia6628 Před rokem

    Please suggest me the best commercial driving school

  • @Maged_abdelhak
    @Maged_abdelhak Před 4 lety

    Hey Everyone, I am a scuba diving instructor since 10 years, our jobs are not sable and life is getting just harder every year, so i 'm thinking of changing my career to commercial diving, i have heard a lot about the risk/benefits of being in there, i am taking the course in NYD Norway, does it really worse it passing it there ? the cost of the course is all what i have, could someone please advice me ? Thanks

  • @chrisfaith7517
    @chrisfaith7517 Před 4 lety +3

    Nothing to do with this video, but you said in another video that you always answer questions. So my question is, I have a 3mm wet suit. Pretty sure I’m drying it right. By hanging it on the shower curtain rod. I think that’s fine, but was told that’s wrong. I will also be attending DIT in the spring. Anything helps man

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 3 lety +1

      Okay, so i'm just now getting back in the swing of things, so sorry for the late reply and you probably already know. drying your wetsuit just put it anywhere thats dry. I throw it over the side of my truck now.

    • @jeremyn4397
      @jeremyn4397 Před rokem

      How was DIT

  • @AbdullahKhan-cp4li
    @AbdullahKhan-cp4li Před 4 lety

    Please make a video on saturation diving pros, cons, and pay..... I'm almost 27 yrs old and looking to become saturation diving. I need true guidance

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 3 lety +1

      I knew a guy who was an offshore diver. He told me the SAT divers were making about $25/hr. A few years ago many companies also did away with depth pay. So, not great, higher risk, you will be cold literally all the time in and out of the water (it has to do with the density of HeO2 mixture or something). Sounds like a bum gig to me. Look on linkedin and message a SAT diver. There is a guy named Doug West who seems like a good cool dude who is willing to talk to people. He does some product stuff for DUI too.

  • @radomirfajnor1292
    @radomirfajnor1292 Před 2 lety

    hi, how good do i have to dive to even get in? im 17 curently a padi rescue diver going for divemaster and intrested in commercial diving any tips?

    • @philipwilson308
      @philipwilson308 Před 2 lety

      All you have to is be able to pee clean and turn a wrench. And sometimes you don't even have to turn a wrench.
      Aside from being underwater, there aren't many similarities between recreational and commercial diving. It sounds like you are quite comfortable in the water and that is the first step. The hardest part of the job is the lifestyle. Whether you work inland or offshore, you will be away from home for weeks or months at a time.

  • @stewartpeterson6477
    @stewartpeterson6477 Před 4 lety

    I am a millwright and I am looking into becoming a commercial diver will my trade be of use in this industry?

  • @netme187
    @netme187 Před 6 lety

    If you right now had to restart would you go to commercial diving or rec diving as a job

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 6 lety +3

      No question, 10/10 times I would be a commercial diver. I love it.

    • @conradmarchant
      @conradmarchant Před 5 lety

      It's definitely not for most. However, for some people, it's the best job in world. Commercial diving has left me with a fractured vertebra and if given the choice to do it all again, I would.

    • @netme187
      @netme187 Před 4 lety

      @@pl-mn2ro sorry to hear that I'm currently rec but have been thinking of commercial for a while

  • @Juiced2528
    @Juiced2528 Před 3 lety +4

    Australia screams for commercial divers and the pay is better here oh and our safety standards too

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 3 lety +2

      Its just about everywhere except the US. I hate regulation, but the diving industry here is a huge failure of oversight. Two people set the standards for dive training, both of them work for these high priced dive schools. The schools all feed into the ADCI system and if you don't go to an ACDE (which is basically a front for ADCI) you don't get to play.

  • @HankHill757
    @HankHill757 Před 4 lety +12

    Go in the military and be a diver. Full pay, medical insurance, retire after 20 years , lots of varied experience and military will pay for your college if you want to further your education.

  • @bakhtyarameeri304
    @bakhtyarameeri304 Před 5 lety

    sir can you give information about underwater welding plz

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety

      Kind of a big broad topic. Is there specific Information you are looking for?

    • @MrliPortuguese
      @MrliPortuguese Před 5 lety

      @@TheSaltyDiver I hear the huge money is a myth and not many Jobs. Plz answer

    • @UWfalcin
      @UWfalcin Před 4 lety

      This comment, LOL

  • @francismeno8969
    @francismeno8969 Před 3 lety +1

    Some companies pay hazardous pay for jobs that call for it.

  • @ianthuynsmabeckh
    @ianthuynsmabeckh Před 3 lety

    I am a commercial diver , a freshly diver just finished diving school with 81 hours .looking for work anything sites or companies I can apply to ?

  • @Jay-pi7rd
    @Jay-pi7rd Před 3 lety

    hey im about to graduate dive school any companies i should look out for?

  • @shockwizard
    @shockwizard Před 5 lety

    Anyone know the best diving school in canada

  • @floored3078
    @floored3078 Před rokem +3

    There's plenty of jobs, most people get out of school and can't handle being away from family, or can't handle the initial pay.
    Put in 5 years, and you'll make 400k+ a year in SAT. the entire profession is dangerous, so do it.

  • @RumpleGold
    @RumpleGold Před 4 měsíci

    I just got a job on a cruise ship as a Carpet cleaner/ Janitor basically and I was thinking. Put in 1 year on the ship and walk away with 90k in my pocket and Go to commercial diving school. But if jobs are scarce , How does one score a 150k 3 month gig.? Is there like a diving roster?

  • @michaell8957
    @michaell8957 Před 4 lety +1

    I have a question is the education hard , meaning the class word. Can anybody pass class work🔎📝 or?

    • @benthomas1545
      @benthomas1545 Před rokem

      It has been , so far, the easiest school I have ever attended

  • @TheOneshot78
    @TheOneshot78 Před 6 lety

    So true..

  • @shawn1569
    @shawn1569 Před 3 lety +1

    You must work inland jobs a lot, im still in school but to me the jobs you said you've been on sounds like inland.

    • @RackTheMilesWelding
      @RackTheMilesWelding Před 3 lety

      And he responded in the comments about sat jobs paying 25/hr out of hearsay from a friend saying depth pay wasn't a factor 🙄
      I looked it up and tried finding any article or pdf upload stating that and there were crickets. Honestly if someone speaks for an industry (being the sat diving on dsv's) and they're aren't even involved then they should just not even say anything. Sat divers are very tight nit so best thing to do in search of information about the gig is ask one.

  • @huangming1855
    @huangming1855 Před 5 lety +1

    which are the four major commercial diving schools?

    • @oswald2799
      @oswald2799 Před 5 lety

      I know of CDA in Florida and DIT in Seattle

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety +2

      The four major schools are not necessarily the best. The big schools charge an arm and a leg, but they ALL teach the same thing as per ANSI requirements. Biggest schools: DIT in Seattle, DAI in Jacksonville, and DAI in Erial NJ. Best schools for your buck: SBCC in santa barbara, Commercial Diving Technologies in Hudsonville FL, and IDI in Charleston SC.

    • @rjvonhammer1414
      @rjvonhammer1414 Před 4 lety

      The cheapest and most thorough school is SBCC MDT in Santa Barbara. I paid $3,000 for my schooling as a California resident. Non residents pay around $12,000. They will teach you WAY more than any other school and it’s in SB... tons of hotties everywhere

  • @rebandy3627
    @rebandy3627 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for this, very informative.

  • @Mike-kw2uv
    @Mike-kw2uv Před 4 lety +1

    Don’t believe the recruiter ! Been a dive industry from Katrina years to pre Obama leaving office .... thanx Prez!!!!

  • @brandonteal7211
    @brandonteal7211 Před 5 lety +8

    Honestly i jus enrolled to go to dit in seattle. I toured the facility and loved it but im scared shitless about the lack of work. I would greatly appreciate it if you could answer a few questions i have. I dont mean to be obnoxious but iv been anxious ever since.

    • @JA-rn5qv
      @JA-rn5qv Před 3 lety

      Don't depend on that. Learn aw pipe welding and get as many certs in that line as well because you will need back up jobs that aren't diving if you want a stable life. Keep developing other skills on the side when you are not diving since your diving job will lay waste to your health by 40 to 45.

    • @brandonteal7211
      @brandonteal7211 Před 3 lety +1

      No worries guys i appreciate all the help but I didnt go. I love the idea but they really do want too much money to get into this with no guarantee of any return... A damn shame.

    • @JA-rn5qv
      @JA-rn5qv Před 3 lety

      @@brandonteal7211 Right l think you made a good decision and even if you still want to get in to it there are much cheaper ways to go about it. But unless you have a big passion for diving it's simply not worth it when there are so many other things you can get in to through vocational training that will provide you with a much better life stability to financial return equation.

  • @eswarm3009
    @eswarm3009 Před 2 lety

    I would like to join course for commercial divers......will it helps me to get a job in the fiels

  • @robinbarrett8708
    @robinbarrett8708 Před 4 lety

    question salty I am in a new relationship with a senior diver lifetime at it ... he said he may stop doing it the middle of this year or next putting his age then at 65 so my question is do you have any statistics on how many of these guys have successful relationships when the other woman is their job? I am brand new to long-distance relation shipping and I took on a booger for my first experience... matter of fact if you happen to know of a support group for the spouses of divers let me know. thank you, Robin, in love with a bubblehead♥

  • @JeriDro
    @JeriDro Před 3 lety +3

    my friend was doing this 10 years ago and he was making around 30-40 an hour. I was looking at jobs today and most pay between 12-20, wtf happened?

    • @JA-rn5qv
      @JA-rn5qv Před 3 lety

      Too many people getting in to the trade and from all over the world, created a huge glut.

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 3 lety +4

      I recently got into an argument with a guy on linkedin about this. Its a logical fallacy called, "Argument From Authority." Its where you base your perception of an issue on your experience alone without taking other experiences into account. Some people make good money diving. Those people are extremely few and far between. This rumor that divers make a lot of money is what perpetuates divers not making anything. Diving companies couldn't care less if you don't want to do a sketchy dive, they can fire you and have someone new in a couple of hours.

    • @FoulMouthActual
      @FoulMouthActual Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheSaltyDiver wow, I was under the impression that this was a dangerous job, and not many people wanted to/could do it.

  • @nothingheretowatch7371

    Have you heard for NYD in norway ?

    • @DogDamour
      @DogDamour Před 4 lety

      good school, i attended there

    • @MegaSlayerr
      @MegaSlayerr Před 4 lety

      @@DogDamour Whats it like? i was looking at there prices, 5k euro for course ?

    • @DogDamour
      @DogDamour Před 4 lety +1

      @@MegaSlayerr I don't know the price right now, It was 40 000 NOK (i think) when i did it 4 years ago. Very good school with nice instructors, 4 months of great quality training for that price is a bargain! The only school where you are trained in closed bell in an air diving course. Also the area is beautiful, great landscape and 1 hour from Oslo, a great city. Accommodation and food is expensive though (everything is expensive in Norway). Maybe you can save a little money if you do it in Durban (South Africa) in about 2 months, but less time is less training the way i see it. Anyway, i had a great time and I highly recommend the NYD

    • @MegaSlayerr
      @MegaSlayerr Před 4 lety

      @@DogDamour cheers for the reply dude, yeah I don't think I'd want to skimp on the training for a job like that , I'm pipe welding at the moment and dive in my spare time currently hoping to start my dive master , would that be any advantage ?
      Did you have any trouble finding work after the course do they support you any bit or are you thrown to the wolves sorta once ur training is up ? I really thinking about investing in this but wanna get as much info as possible.

    • @DogDamour
      @DogDamour Před 4 lety

      @@MegaSlayerr You are welcome and sorry for the late reply! Well… I have been in the diving industry for a few years (was already doing that before I attended NYD) and I still sometimes struggle to find good jobs or longer than a few days. There are good and bad seasons, highs and lows, it is a very unstable business and most divers work as freelancers with several companies when the demand for divers requires them. So be ready to be active and persistent in job searching. It is not easy, and can be quite discouraging at first.
      It is not likely that you find a job through the school; I remember hearing from school staff that some norwegian companies contact them sometimes looking for divers, but norwegian divers. Once you finish your training, you will probably have to look for job by yourself unless you know someone in some company. If you are a certified and experience welder, I guess that makes quite a difference. The school has also an underwater welding course, that could be the way for you. But then, if you have a good, well paid (as I think pipe welding is, but i am not really sure) and somewhat stable job I would think twice before quitting it to become a diver, unless you really feel that is what you want to do. Most divers I have known are in the business because they love it, and not so much for the money, which is not a lot in most cases. Others are tired of it but have been doing that for too long and are a little bit too old to start again in something different.
      Also where you are from or where you live makes a difference, for example, you have more job opportunities and chance of success in your career in a country with offshore oil or big maritime industry. Beside diving, I have a college degree in nautical science and i am currently doing my cadet period to get my officer on the watch license. I love diving but haven’t got as far as I would like and expected in my career, last year i got very few job, I am not that young anymore and time is not on my side so I am not sure if will still be in the business in a few years. If you are young and really want to be a diver, go for it! Doing a divemaster course is not relevant in the commercial diving industry in my opinion, if you already dive and know you are confortable underwater, that is enough. I am a divemaster myself and also considering the possibility of making a living of the leisure/technical diving in the future, but understand that commercial and leisure diving are very different business.
      You can ask all that you want, I was also full of questions back in the day

  • @mr.popcorn7456
    @mr.popcorn7456 Před 4 lety

    5:13 and what if these all 1200 students see that video🙄🙄 then it's the same thing again hahahhahahhahahahahhahahhah

  • @ghosttankcommander5397

    How many hours do u guys work a day on average?

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety

      Office: typical hours; field: as long as there is daylight

    • @conradmarchant
      @conradmarchant Před 5 lety +3

      Oil field: 12/day
      Inland (Union, Non-Union): 8-12
      These numbers don't reflect some finer points of the job.
      Oilfield: You're out at sea weeks to months at a time. 12 hours on, 12 hours off. And your off hours also will have a 30 minute safety meeting, any of your toiletry needs, and two of your meal times.... And this only reflects the time of Tenders and Divers on shift schedule. Most oilfield Divers do what is called Rotation scheduling. This is when the Divers, instead of diving during a shift, dive in a constantly revolving order. You wake up, do one dive as the Standby Diver (safety diver), then you dive, then either you're done for the next however many hours or more typically you do your decompression (post-dive compression chamber medical treatment).... You're supposed to have 12 hours off between dives, or ever being Standby Diver readiness, but that time can be shortened (and often is) through some dive table repetitive dive maths.
      In Inland world of diving the shortest day I've had (while still getting pay 8 hours) was 2 hours. Alaska dive Union has 8hour minimums. The longest contiguous shift I've had (non stop work) was 40 hours. Because that yacht was going to stop sinking, no matter how many holes we patched.

  • @rjvonhammer1414
    @rjvonhammer1414 Před 4 lety +1

    It’s only 30k if you go to CDA or DIT. Go to SBCC MDT and it’s under 12k and you get the absolute BEST training. The other schools don’t teach you SHIT!! I’m a union commercial diver in Alaska and that school is the only way to go. I e also worked in the GOM and California east coast.

  • @reverseastronaut643
    @reverseastronaut643 Před 5 lety

    Currently at IDI, they tell you straight up that your probably not gunna be Diving straight out of Dive school. Anyone who doesnt know, most SAT Schools wont even take you unless you have 1 year of DIVING experience, not tendering. Plus there is alot of additional training: DCBC, Loyds Welding (Only 1 guy in the US that is certified and teaches it in the US, currently at IDI..). Also being a Veteran, IDI is a Veteran Owned and Operated School... also its only 26k for Veteran Students, GI Bill/VOC Rehab pays for it all... jjst saying.. #nodebt

    • @brandonpotts54
      @brandonpotts54 Před 5 lety

      Getting ready to apply there how do you like it?

    • @Ib90
      @Ib90 Před 4 lety

      Do they take financial aid and what is the full name for the school, I never heard of it

  • @t.g.ityler8222
    @t.g.ityler8222 Před 3 lety +2

    Best plan ever. Just join the military as a Union Welder. You already have a foot in because employers will see that the military pays for practically everything including your medical Bill's therefore that's a green flag for the employer.

  • @a2thee270
    @a2thee270 Před 5 lety

    Looking at CDA commercial diving academy in Javksonville florida, anyone know anything bout them.

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 5 lety +1

      Check out the video I did on dive schools. I would suggest commercial diving technologies or IDI if you're on the east coast

    • @reverseastronaut643
      @reverseastronaut643 Před 5 lety

      CDA is a shitshow. We got 7 CDA Students here at IDI that transferred and they have told us how shitty they are.

    • @nathanwhite2683
      @nathanwhite2683 Před 5 lety +1

      You need to go to DIT if you want a good dive school

    • @nateclift2294
      @nateclift2294 Před 5 lety

      Why? Whats wrong with that school?
      @@reverseastronaut643

    • @zachhenderson9385
      @zachhenderson9385 Před 5 lety

      @@nateclift2294 i haven't gone but from what i hear and see:
      Up to 30 students per class so less 1 on 1
      It cost 30k for the class
      The living quarters is trash
      Do research on IDI if you're om the east coast. Or CDT in west central florida. I attend IDI soon. Great people ive talked to on the phone, and they seem to actually care about my questions unlike CDA did.

  • @thehustlestandard9899
    @thehustlestandard9899 Před 5 lety +3

    Very true , offshore rigs make u tender for 2 years and then dive . You start out at 25 an hour and 500 a dive when u start diving . That’s for offshore drilling rigs tho.

  • @oceanscience2240
    @oceanscience2240 Před 3 lety +2

    Go to a real dive school, they would have trained you better. They would have taught you to make good decisions. You would have never gotten sick if you had the right training.

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 3 lety +2

      I'm sorry, i must have fallen asleep the day they went over pre-dive water quality testing for infectious waterborne diseases.

  • @vizslaerick8850
    @vizslaerick8850 Před 3 lety +1

    This guy is full of shit. Ian a 10 year veteran. 6 years in the Gulf of Mexico. Maybe, 40% of my 10 years has been in great to ok visibility. So.etimes , no vis. I did this work because it was a dream. I did 6 years in the Gulf, 3 years in New York's East River and 1 year in Cali's Santa Barbara channel. Loved it. Do your dream and don't listen to negative people like this.

  • @izzirv
    @izzirv Před 5 lety +8

    Does anybody know anything about D.I.T in Seattle Washington I’m thinking of attending soon.thanks in advance

    • @venture17fly
      @venture17fly Před 5 lety +2

      just know that the industry is saturated and your gonna have to work your way up to become a diver and not a tender

    • @sarahsayshello9726
      @sarahsayshello9726 Před 5 lety +2

      I plan on going there 2, far as ive heard they are great

    • @izzirv
      @izzirv Před 5 lety +1

      thomas welinski what’s a tender?

    • @sarahsayshello9726
      @sarahsayshello9726 Před 5 lety

      @@izzirv basically a deck hand

    • @dom3354
      @dom3354 Před 5 lety +13

      You could always just join the Navy and save yourself the 30k on the school and get paid while training . plus end up with the GI bill to take different courses when you get out or while still in . DIT teaches you the US Navy construction dive course and even uses the same books , at least when I went . Also unless you have a background in construction/mechanics/fabrication, engineering etc it’s going to take you years to reach the good paying jobs.
      I was raised around commercial construction , my dad built gas stations for 30 years . So I was young when I was digging ditches and fitting pipe , finishing concrete , swinging a hammer , etc etc..then I joined the Army and became a helicopter mechanic and crew chief. Got out and went to work again for dad. Dad wanted to semi retire and focus on his gas station he owned so the company shut down and my brothers and I went to work for other companies. I just happened to end up getting a job at a commercial dive company that was expanding their environmental division into doing underground tank removals from gas stations etc... while working there I heard how much a union diver made . Since I learned how to scuba dive at 10 years old I figured I could pass the courses at DIT. So I asked for the time off to go to DIT and complete the courses. It still took me about two years to become a full time union diver and it wasn’t at the company I started at.
      There are a lot more regulations in place which makes it even harder to out last the attrition rate from layoffs and new recruits the schools pump out every month etc. in theory the new four man dive team will employ more divers ..but the downside is there are now twice the guys trying to get wet for the same job.
      Almost anybody can blow bubbles underwater...it is what you can do all alone in the dark fast , efficient , is what employers want . So the more you can do topside work related the better off you are. Also , you better not have any issues with anxiety, confined spaces , skin irritations from petroleum products etc . Put it this way , there are far far more Spec Ops guys in the Army alone than there are commercial divers, and there are reasons why. Demand is one factor and the competition for top tier divers is fierce . Also , get used to being yelled at and hazed for the first part of your career. All that said , once a guy has a reputation the work is plentiful. I know of several guys I worked with that are still at it 20 years later
      The danger side ..I also had one of my old co workers die while at a different company. I knew more people in the Army that died on the job however. Both of those industries are dangerous and if you do it long enough, odds are you will eventually learn about lose.
      Get a plan and follow it the best you can.

  • @FoulMouthActual
    @FoulMouthActual Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks... I thought I wanted to be a commercial diver; fuck that.

  • @prescottholland5239
    @prescottholland5239 Před 4 lety +1

    It’s a total crapshoot in this industry. I graduated CDA in 2003. Didn’t learn shit there. Everything thing I learned was from experience on the job. I was lucky to get on with UCC in Connecticut on a nuke job in Japan. From there an inland company out of Florida. The key is when you get your shot bust ass and don’t complain. You’re gonna get the shit jobs if you’re the FNG. Yeah the water is uncomfortable in the winter but ignore that shit. It may be your only shot. Make the most of it. You’re only as good as your last dive.

  • @youqyvlog6298
    @youqyvlog6298 Před 11 měsíci

    Hi bro commercial dive how much deep going may be

  • @librarae74
    @librarae74 Před 3 lety

    I have a personal question about this job. Met a guy online & is" now a long distance relationship" with many questions due to scams. he says he's located in Alaska on a 6 mth contract is this Normal? 2 he says he not aloud to video chat near the work site which he's always at ? Cell phones are prohibited on site for the same reason both due to high frequencies from Wi-Fi networks that can be dangerous with the gas lines, oxygen tanks... this true? Now saying he dropped his phone in the water & asking me to get him a new rugged quality phone on my carrier plan & ship him it... So he has a working, rugged phone to talk to me daily when done work & in his ? Since it's his contract he's run out of his 30% to start the job & ran out buy buying equipment & material & needs to find 8000$ for a ... to do the job... can anyone help to clarify these questions. Plsss & tks

  • @FGuilt
    @FGuilt Před 6 lety +3

    You forgot to mention that the "certifications" that schools sell aren't worth the paper they're printed on. That would save alot of people alot of money.

  • @timothyhenderson1914
    @timothyhenderson1914 Před 2 lety

    Can I take my dog when I travel?

  • @brandonteal7211
    @brandonteal7211 Před 5 lety

    ...i apologize and realize the stupidity of my comment earlier hahaha. No need to adress it , i just never have taken such a leap.

    • @brandonteal7211
      @brandonteal7211 Před 3 lety

      @horizon your so dumb! Theres obviously a prior comment that I'm telling the poster i dont need an answer to. Follow along little boy. In these type of environments a "snot nose" who should have answered his own question gets less hours period. I also happen to have been a rigger, a welder (among many other directly relevant skills to this field.) Guys like you do well in offices or something. Not with other men who wont deal with your attitude day after day.

  • @jacobhilpert4932
    @jacobhilpert4932 Před 4 lety +1

    On the money you forgot about offshore mixed gas

    • @michaelmerchant3301
      @michaelmerchant3301 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah roger that. I made damn good money in offshore oil. My first check was over 1800 in 1 week. And i hit the water the very first day, (after the divers made their rotation). This guy is definitely an inland diver, or TENDER, from the offshore industry.

    • @carlospuig6634
      @carlospuig6634 Před 4 lety

      Michael Merchant I’m about to star school July 6 my friend and I’m been reading a lot of mix comments about this career what’s your opinion in this industry is it dying ? Are you employed right now ?

    • @jacobhilpert4932
      @jacobhilpert4932 Před 4 lety

      Carlos Puig its easy to get a job but not a good one as a red hat be ready to do super shitty work all day and yes the industry is dying offshore due to rovs

    • @carlospuig6634
      @carlospuig6634 Před 4 lety

      Jacob Hilpert this is pretty sad for one second I thought I found something I was gonna like make a living I sign up to start on July 6 at commercial diving technologies in Hudson Florida but it’s amazing all the stories they tell you just to sell you the program and get your money thanks for your time replying to me I will consider this more and more

    • @carlospuig6634
      @carlospuig6634 Před 4 lety

      Jacob Hilpert what if my main goal is to become a saturation diver ?

  • @SoleMan117
    @SoleMan117 Před 9 měsíci

    You mention there aren't a lot of jobs: what about going international? Do other cou tries figure in your statistic?

  • @tonyvancauwenberghe3171

    30000? 😂 14-17000 yes

  • @royjefferson78
    @royjefferson78 Před 6 lety

    Salty diver I want too no if the underwater welder offshore will be working in the water around shark?

    • @paraphenaliac4657
      @paraphenaliac4657 Před 6 lety

      Roy Jefferson only if you’re working at the oilrigs where he is working is the Pacific Northwest

    • @royjefferson78
      @royjefferson78 Před 6 lety

      lem thelurker So at the oil rigs u out in the open how would they keep off u?

    • @TheSaltyDiver
      @TheSaltyDiver  Před 6 lety

      Minor correction, I live in the PNW, but often work all over the country. In the past year I have done in Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Ohio, and Louisiana for work.
      I don't think anyone worries about sharks too much, but I've never been on an oil rig.

    • @paraphenaliac4657
      @paraphenaliac4657 Před 6 lety

      The Salty Diver oh thats awesome man I just got my Open Water certification I would like to become a commercial diver.

    • @royjefferson78
      @royjefferson78 Před 6 lety

      Reason why I asked was because I’m thinking of going to school for underwater welding and wanted to work offshore.

  • @albertcallwood5478
    @albertcallwood5478 Před 3 lety

    Sounds like a typical construction job. My son is doing this now going to schoolI’m a union carpenter over 20 years. Have my own business tell my guys work is not consistent save your money

  • @hurt1704
    @hurt1704 Před měsícem

    Why do guys go to these very expensive $30 plus thousand dollar dive schools when you can go to young’s memorial Slcc dive academy in Louisiana for like 9 grand? I don’t get it. It’s been around forever

  • @jadegouge8239
    @jadegouge8239 Před 5 lety

    👍

  • @funkyalfonso
    @funkyalfonso Před 4 lety

    In sat for months? No.