The Trades Are Dying: Honest Carpenter Response

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • linktr.ee/maddox_mechanic
    Link to the original video
    • THE TRADES ARE DYING.....
    ‪@TheHonestCarpenter‬
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 88

  • @bob89901
    @bob89901 Před rokem +12

    Completely agree, nobody talks about this. I welded after high school and got paid a garbage wage (unlike what Mike Rowe says), I got a mechanical engineering degree and now I sit in an office and design robots. I get paid 5x more as an engineer and feel guilty talking to former coworkers because welding is so much more physically demanding.

    • @889976889
      @889976889 Před rokem +3

      Agreed. Been in welding for 12 years now if I didn’t have my current job I’d probably go do something else. Those welders mike Rowe is talking about are a very small minority.

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem +2

      Hey congrats on the degree as well as the job! I can see that. I'm an engineering tech. Comparatively it is an easier job than any of my trades jobs. The trades are hard. Mentally and physically. I think the trades should pay better.

  • @olivertaylor8788
    @olivertaylor8788 Před rokem +18

    The trade are dying because nobody wants to pay labor to do work.hell,the material sellers have raised prices on materials, hell,let them install it too.we aren't doing it for free.youre right.dumb hires dumber,and you're seeing the result.i retired 20 times in 10 years,there is no money in trades.If I go wire in a service intrance,it's $2000.00 half up front.or call someone else

    • @Ink30
      @Ink30 Před rokem +4

      I charge 300 an hour to make up for when work is slow now that work is plentiful I make em pay me like a doctor

  • @terryeffinp
    @terryeffinp Před rokem +7

    So far as a tradesman I have had a pretty good experience. I am 10 years in as a diesel technician, I specialize in Detroit Diesel and Carrier transicold. I went to vo-tech in high school, went to a trade school after that and started where I am working now at 19. I went from apprentice to journeyman by the time I was 25. I have roughly 100k in tools + toolbox paid for in full at the shop. I paid off all of my debts and started a family. I got to go to a lot of training paid for by the company over the years. I have competed in TMC supertech since 2015 which is a national skills competition for heavy duty truck technicians, this year I placed 8th overall. I competed in a north American skills competition for Detroit Diesel put on by Daimler in 2018 and took first place. The pay is really good for my region, however with the rampant inflation over the past year or so things are tighter than they use to be.
    There is no doubt that you are literally sacrificing yourself and your well being on a daily basis, I have plate and 7 screws in one of my hands because of it. But when you think about it though that has been the role of men for millennia, sacrificing yourself for your wife and kids, that is what our dads, grandfathers, great grandfathers etc. did for us, and in many cases they did it for what we would view today as a slave wage. Despite that I really do enjoy what it is that I do for a living, I honestly believe that I was put on this earth to build or repair things in some way. I do think that we will see massive shortages in the skilled trades as the older generation retires and there aren't young people to replace them, I think you will see a decline in the quality of workmanship in general because there weren't enough young people working under seasoned tradesmen, and I also think that you will see labor prices skyrocket, there is only so many hours a man can work in a day and those available hours will end up going to the highest bidder.

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem +1

      Wow. Thank you for sharing that. You're very accomplished and skilled in your trade. I respect the insight you've provided to the community. Do you think there is a fix? or perhaps time will tell?

  • @3verdades832
    @3verdades832 Před rokem +3

    I work as HVAC/R technician and the pay is decent, the problem is the long hours of work and the weekends on calls.

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem +2

      I’m sure the pay is decent but sounds like you’ve had to sacrifice a lot of person time.

    • @3verdades832
      @3verdades832 Před rokem +1

      @@aiyogarage I have to, you know at what time you start working, but have no idea what time you’ll be back home. Meanwhile this company are making a ton of money at your time expenses

    • @alexsmith-ob3lu
      @alexsmith-ob3lu Před 4 dny

      For those types of companies, I’d just work there for a few years, get the work experience and then move on.
      I worked as an HVAC controls (BAS) technician for 2 years and had the same issues you are having. On call during weekends, too much overtime work, and crazy work hours. I left that field and became a specialized controls electrician.

  • @Ink30
    @Ink30 Před rokem +2

    Make them pay you 500$ an hour if no one wants to do it they can't replace you know your worth, we should make millions

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem +1

      Lol idk about $500 an hour. But we should be charging more in general for sure.

  • @bertellijustin6376
    @bertellijustin6376 Před rokem +7

    Facts. Hvac here. Why take a job with the hall, for 15 dollars an hour (the same I can get at McDonalds)…and also paying three bucks an hour to the hall by the way….so less than McDonalds. Then we here “just wait till you’re with the hall for a few years!”….yeah and wait for the increase in dues with every raise. They take your raise for the Union. And if you’re working non-Union, joy, you’re paid more, maybe if your boss isn’t dirty and only hiring untrained people to juice. The trades are a racket at this point. The only people getting rich off of HVAC are contractors screwing their HVAC techs and the schools selling bullshit certificates that mean absolutely nothing. The fuck?! Anyone can take the EPA test without paying 10 grand for useless schools that won’t have functional training aids, equipment or knowledge. The fuck?!?

    • @xpicklepie
      @xpicklepie Před rokem +1

      Trades have always been a racket. Worker abuse, shorting pay, endless lies. It chews up even the toughest SOB.

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem

      The fuck is right Bertelli.

    • @Ink30
      @Ink30 Před rokem

      The union and non union construction contractors need to raise bids and pay us 500$ an hour to where even doctors and lawyers go I wish I was a construction worker they make more and have a bigger house.

  • @strategicservices9906
    @strategicservices9906 Před rokem +6

    $18 -$20 per hour go to Mcdonalds

    • @alexsmith-ob3lu
      @alexsmith-ob3lu Před 4 dny

      McDonald’s won’t even pay $15 per hour. They’ll just replace you with automation and robotics.

  • @warrenreed6702
    @warrenreed6702 Před rokem +3

    I agree trades don't pay, I worked in construction and now make 50% more stacking deck boards.

  • @johnsradios484
    @johnsradios484 Před rokem +3

    I worked as a electricians helper 40 years ago and it was the worst job I ever had. Lasted 1 year while I went to trade school for electronics. Low pay, no healthcare, no nothing.

    • @Ink30
      @Ink30 Před rokem +1

      Union has health insurance and retirement hard to get into though.

    • @alexsmith-ob3lu
      @alexsmith-ob3lu Před 4 dny

      Union only works if you’re in a big city environment. Elsewhere, you’re stuck with non-union small shop.

  • @benniebarrow348
    @benniebarrow348 Před rokem +5

    Been in the commercial construction business for 40 plus years. Bottom line is low bid get's the job. Those with the money create those jobs. They are never going to pay anymore than they have too and couldn't care less about a person's well being. As long as there are endless amounts of construction companies that will "do it cheaper" the trades people are going to be at their mercy. Add the constant influx of illegal immigrants who can get the job done for less, under any circumstances, nothing is going to change . My deduction from years of experience is if you want more your gonna have to either have your own operation (and that's no guarantee in a cut throat market at most times) or go for the degreed jobs that require the education and time invested . Sadly that's just how the world is when it comes to top money and public status. It's a keyboard world.......a hammer and wrench get little respect.

    • @keepingitmellow
      @keepingitmellow Před rokem +1

      even white collar jobs are too much of a guarantee I know personally 3 engineers making less than 100k two with masters degree

    • @alexsmith-ob3lu
      @alexsmith-ob3lu Před 4 dny

      Most illegal immigrants go into unskilled installer jobs. While many legal immigrants tend to take away white collar jobs.
      There is a “grey zone” of work in the trades that is not distorted, if you can find it for yourself.
      I myself got an associate degree in automation and control systems. Worked as an engineering technician for two years and then went into the electrician trade to do HVAC controls and fire alarms.
      From my experience, there are too many electricians who focus on wiring up receptacles or light bulbs, while electricians who know how to do controls or fire alarms and automation are very, very few.

  • @WhatTimeIsIt369
    @WhatTimeIsIt369 Před rokem +6

    Trades are severely underpaid. When the trades catch up to what they should be getting paid then people will want to go into them. For now there is almost zero incentive. Work hard, in dangerous conditions, no guarantee in anyway, feast or famine. I have two trades under my belt from 30 years ago and if I were to consider doing it I wouldn't have to think too long about it. Might as well work for the government because at least you get a pension. No pension at the end of your working career. Nothing! And to add to that you are looked down on by the academic snobs. Go on a dating site and say you are a tradesman and women want nothing to do with you. So not enough money, dangerous, no security, looked at as if you are a low brow idiot. Ya no thanks. Journeymen should be making at least $100. One day when there are none left but a few then their worth will finally be seen. No houses being built, no cars being repaired, your furnace won't work, your plumbing is going to not work someday etc. Good luck academia!!

  • @slickearl827
    @slickearl827 Před rokem +14

    People act like construction workers are scumbags.
    The way I feel about it is. Build your own schools, homes etc. As a brickmason and a Carpenter for over 40years. I don't have to risk my life and limbs for ungrateful jerks for cheap wages. Looking forward to retirement. I myself have had just about enough of the disrespect 😤

    • @slickearl827
      @slickearl827 Před rokem +3

      @V I Λ ridiculous. I have heard the nasty stuff teachers are telling children about becoming construction workers. Shows their intelligence. Without construction workers teachers would be teaching in a field. Living in tents. We are all needed! Stop thinking everyone is better than one another!

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem +1

      I appreciate what you did or us. Thank you.

  • @MykhailoArmorer
    @MykhailoArmorer Před rokem +3

    I just thought about another approach to problem - that earlier all trades, was a way simple, especially on starting level. Now there is lot of tools and training even for low level employee. So if person is smart enough, he gets out of entry level position one way or another. If there is no way up, anyone who can understand it, leave, and who is not smart enough just isn't smart enough to go up. Surely you can hire any ammounght of unskilled labor, but you need someone in the middle and someone on top. Smart people, basically. But if smart people leave, you have what you have....

  • @CharlesBallowe
    @CharlesBallowe Před rokem +4

    The local wages for electricians are tied to hours of work at the apprentice level starting out at 45% of journeyman pay, going up to 50% after 1000 hours, 55% after 2000 hours, etc up to 90% passing 6500 hours. Journeyman wage is ~$50 + another $40ish in benefits (pension, health insurance, etc).
    It's not a terrible path. Not the path I'm on, but I have a lot of respect for the people who choose it. Local electrical contractors tend to bill ~100/hour for labor.

    • @Ink30
      @Ink30 Před rokem +1

      Yip you can make 200k a year working hard 💪

    • @Ink30
      @Ink30 Před rokem

      Yip you can make 200k a year working hard 💪

    • @matthewwax4434
      @matthewwax4434 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Depends on location

    • @CharlesBallowe
      @CharlesBallowe Před 9 měsíci

      @@matthewwax4434 fair point. I've recently heard that they're completely shafted in places like Florida.

  • @corey5109
    @corey5109 Před rokem +2

    Rowe is a corporate mouthpiece, nothing more. You have to work for yourself. I spent 20 years as a German car tech. When I left the top was 28 an hour, and the dealer shop rate was 180 an hour. During that time I took a 2 year welding program, electronics, and a machine shop program.
    I have a small shop. I have a lathe, mill, hoist, surface grinder, benders, all my mechanics tools, and tons of tooling I have collected over the years. I don’t touch anything around here for under 100 bucks an hour.
    I do all kinds of off the wall crap. Remote activated secret compartments in cars. Custom parts for engine swaps, custom actuators, etc.
    I probably have 200 grand in tools and equipment at this point. I don’t need a middle man to pimp me out and take the lions share of the money, and neither do you. Look at the median wage for most trades. You won’t be buying a house on it in most metropolitan parts of the country.
    Think about it, the person actually doing the work makes the least. That’s the reason why there is a supposed labor shortage. No one wants to participate in the exploitation economy. Can you blame them?

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem

      I honestly can't blame them. It's exploitation. Plane and simple. Thank you for sharing your experience.

  • @tiagodecastro2929
    @tiagodecastro2929 Před rokem +2

    In my area, some trades get paid poorly, but others are making a damn fortune. I went the electrician route and ended up being a telecom tech. I'm 26 making way more than the average 26 y.o. in my region, and that's before benefits and profit sharing (employee owned company). I've encountered lots of guys across all the trades who were making crap for pay but then switched companies and became really happy with their pay. It's all about where you look, in my experience
    Also, to defend Mike Rowe, I'm not aware that he ever claimed to be a tradesman. Toss in some links to vids of him saying otherwise if I'm wrong, but he claims to be from a family of tradesmen, and aspired to be like them, but decided he was too bad at it and went to college instead. That's the way he's seemed to put it every time I've seen him talk about it. And he does good work bringing awareness of the trade labor shortage into the public eye. Doesn't he do a lot of recruiter work?
    I would say that criticizing him for grabbing a degree instead of a tool is like criticizing a recruiter for picking up a pen & paperwork instead of a rifle. The recruiter is just as important for the military as is the soldier. In the same vein, someone like Rowe is important to bring attention to a field of work that, yeah, I don't think gets enough coverage in mainstream culture. If anything, my personal experience growing up was every major influence in my life (parents, school, media) explicitly saying to stay as far away from trades as possible. All this being said, Rowe isn't a tradesman and doesn't even represent tradesmen, he just gives hardworking people a chance to share their experiences in their respective career fields. And I see nothing wrong with his decision to recognize a lack of natural talent & roll with what skills towards which he thinks he's naturally more inclined, instead of vainly pursuing something in which he feared he would never be good.

    • @889976889
      @889976889 Před rokem +1

      I agree I think it really depends on the trade. I know hvac guys & plumbers making a killing right now

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem

      Also worked telecomm. I agree its about where you work. But most people in the trades have limited options. In some ways its their fault, in other ways its not. The point is that trade work is demanding both physically and mentally. It doesn't pay for the long term damage on the body and mind (most of the time).
      Mike Rowe hasn't done the best at spreading information about the trades. I really like that he is very supportive of the trades. But I also feel like he bats for the big guy. Not the guy trying to support his family.

  • @strategicservices9906
    @strategicservices9906 Před rokem +2

    Whether you are an auto tech, plumber, heating Ac tech or a professional like a dentist, physician or veterinarian you will not make money unless you are your own boss

  • @889976889
    @889976889 Před rokem +1

    Spot on. Been in the trades 12 years now sages been stagnant for years. My question is what do we do about it? Even with the “labor” shortage it doesn’t seem driving wages up.

    • @paulinoleal5592
      @paulinoleal5592 Před rokem

      Union

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem

      My question exatly

    • @Ink30
      @Ink30 Před rokem

      Unions

    • @justingibbons2696
      @justingibbons2696 Před rokem +1

      Unions don't pay enough to buy a house. Pay is pathetic across the board. You have to be a contractor to make a living. We have legalized slave wages and honestly smaller companies are the worst at the worker exploitation as they have minimal overhead and pay the same as everyone else while having the same high labor rates as the larger companies. It's truly fucked how trades are treated especially carpenters.

    • @Ink30
      @Ink30 Před rokem

      @Justin Gibbons I make really great money in the union like 90k in missouri roughly 45$ an hour the only downside is when work is slow the layoffs you lose alot 2008-2011 was not fun

  • @alexsmith-ob3lu
    @alexsmith-ob3lu Před rokem +1

    Good video, but based on my experience and the personal experiences of family friends I speak to, the trades have been very distorted and there are certainly some trades a young person needs to avoid. While other trades are very lucrative (well paid) to go into.

  • @Killerrob-rn3os
    @Killerrob-rn3os Před rokem +2

    I make more as a school custodian pushing a mop around lol

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem +2

      bro that hurts haha

    • @Killerrob-rn3os
      @Killerrob-rn3os Před rokem +1

      @@aiyogarage yeah man I’m not disrespecting the trades but they don’t get paid what they should . The only real way to make money in the trades is being ur own boss but not everyone is cut out for that

  • @philiparmand3534
    @philiparmand3534 Před rokem +1

    What is also not being mentioned is how many years it takes to become a master at your trade. All that time is the equivalent to a MD residency, with dramatically lower pay and much higher risk of bodily harm. I feel in the next 10 years it will become very obvious to society what highly skilled Craftsman are worth, as the elder generation retires or croaks and the gap becomes painfully obvious.

    • @paulinoleal5592
      @paulinoleal5592 Před rokem

      Smell that? MONEY to be made. I’m deff taking advantage of this. In 10 years I want to go from someone who wants to get his electrical apprenticeship, to a guy that owns a construction company and has a whole crew that is trustworthy and happy because they are being paid good and treated well.

    • @Ink30
      @Ink30 Před rokem

      It's already this way I told my union contactor I wanted 100$ an hour on the check plus full benefits and he gave it to me without blinking

  • @avernvrey7422
    @avernvrey7422 Před rokem +1

    I think he mentions pay, but right, he didn't focus intensely on it. Your vid does a better job of that. Throughout history, getting resources is what motivates people. These days, the trades simply aren't offering young people sufficient motivation to enter.

  • @albertosalcido4882
    @albertosalcido4882 Před rokem +1

    also they are dying because of these jealous as old men not trying to teach young men what they know just so they can continue to be more valuable so at the end of the day the trades are going to die because of lack of sharing knowledge

  • @markh3279
    @markh3279 Před rokem +3

    This is not a racist comment at all, but why do you think the southern border is still open? Social engineering sir.

    • @johnsradios484
      @johnsradios484 Před rokem +1

      Has nothing to do with the video. Post your own border video if that’s what you want to talk about.

    • @markh3279
      @markh3279 Před rokem +1

      @@johnsradios484 ahh, so you don’t know what’s been happening since Ronald Raygun.

    • @Killerrob-rn3os
      @Killerrob-rn3os Před rokem +1

      @@markh3279 you can’t even spell lol😂

    • @markh3279
      @markh3279 Před rokem

      @@Killerrob-rn3os which word that I misspell for you

    • @Killerrob-rn3os
      @Killerrob-rn3os Před rokem +1

      @@markh3279 Reagan

  • @stevenjames6830
    @stevenjames6830 Před rokem

    You’re not gonna make more than $30 an hour realistically and if you do, you’re gonna be working crazy hours all this for something it could’ve gotten for the couple of years of studying

  • @MrFaceonline
    @MrFaceonline Před rokem +2

    three words, seven figure salaries. If the keyboard rapists in the IT earn 200,300k and up in cushy office jobs or work from home then the tradesmen should earn atleast 2-3 times that. 100 bucks an hour should be minimum for aprentices, 200+ bucks for experienced tradesmen. You pay peanuts you get monkiez.

  • @fosyay1780
    @fosyay1780 Před rokem +1

    You mention all of your experience throughout college and different job positions, but you claim that The Honest Carpenter is a fake because he pivoted from being just a carpenter to a host of a CZcams show after a knee injury. I'm pretty sure he mentioned his knee injury in the very video that you "responded" to.
    In fact, he mentions the pay as well. He mentions that people tell him "Carpenters just shouldn't cost more than $20/hr" or something like that. I agreed with his video entirely, and I don't understand what you think you refuted here. Both this video and his bring up a lot of the same points, yours just talks about yourself extensively and gets more nihilistic.
    And why not go from engineering technician to engineer?

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem +2

      Oh I don't have anything against the honest carpenter and I don't think he's a fake. I just think he missed the biggest point about the pay being crap and usually working conditions are unfavorable.
      I just not a new engineering tech job. I'll have to spend some time at my new company to work my way up to engineer.

    • @fosyay1780
      @fosyay1780 Před rokem

      @@aiyogarage
      I'm a new engineering tech at a company as well, much safer than my coworkers in actual trades.
      I think The Carpenter made more than one video. There's one where he mentions that master-level Carpenters are capped at like $35 or something and I consider that too low for any trade tbh

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem +2

      @@fosyay1780 oh congrats! Yes I agree that $35 an hour for a master of your craft is much too low. But it's an unfortunate situation where someone is always willing to do it for less. Its a billing war, not a quality war. It's my personal belief that trade wages will continue to decline. And I honestly don't see a solution insight. I imagine they'll probably just import workers at some point to do the trades.. I'm honestly not sure.

    • @fosyay1780
      @fosyay1780 Před rokem

      @@aiyogarage
      Another thing I bet they'll try doing is just 3D printing everything that nobody on the crew can make by hand. The trades are just going to prefab and no repairs will happen

    • @independent900
      @independent900 Před rokem

      @@aiyogarage Pay is a simple matter of supply and demand. The supply of trades people increases every day by the thousands at the border. If you care about the trades, don't support the open border policy of one political party! Your union leaders are doing fine, maybe it's time to re-examine the system you're in.

  • @jimsummers487
    @jimsummers487 Před rokem

    Work is for immigrants…… always has been……

    • @aiyogarage
      @aiyogarage  Před rokem

      I really disagree with that statement.