becoming a tractor mechanic/tech

   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #31  
I have a former student who took Diesel Mechanics classes through the Regional Occupational Center while in high school. Went right to work after graduation. Seven years later, he's a mobile mechanic for the local New Holland/Kioti dealer, and his base salary is $120k - plus overtime, call-out bonuses, company truck, full health insurance for his wife and kids. Nice kid with a very strong work ethic.
 
   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #32  
I have a former student who took Diesel Mechanics classes through the Regional Occupational Center while in high school. Went right to work after graduation. Seven years later, he's a mobile mechanic for the local New Holland/Kioti dealer, and his base salary is $120k - plus overtime, call-out bonuses, company truck, full health insurance for his wife and kids. Nice kid with a very strong work ethic.

Left Coast rates. Wouldn’t command half of that at an ag shop in the Southeast.
 
   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #33  
We pay tractor mechanics very well. Lawn and garden oriented shops pay poorly, but when you get into meaningful equipment you can do very well. We pay better than any automotive technicians in our area.

I'd hire 10 young guys who want to become mechanics today if we could. Not enough of you out there, and that means you'll be worth that much more in the future.

Number 1 option. PM to Messicks, ask for some time for a phone call, then ask what it pays and what their more senior guys make, plus all the other info that you need - what's the career like, what training do you need, what are the hours like, where can it take you, what do they think the future's like with increasing electronic widgets?

Seems to me that over time high end tractors will get more automatic - the driver will be lower skilled, the mechanic higher skilled. So getting into maintenance to me feels like a winning move. Particularly if you bring a bit of computer and electronic skills with you - which younger guys tend to have a bit of. If you become the guy in the shop who deals with the tricky computer stuff, you'll be worth gold.

Most of these trades to me also have the massive benefit that if you're in any way business-minded, over time you can become an owner operator, and specialise in some niche that nobody else wants to do, but when it needs to be done is worth good money. I said to both my nieces they should become plumbers, because when someone's toilet blocks up at 9pm on a Sunday night, they'll pay whatever it takes for someone to come fix it. A broken tractor in harvest season may be quite similar, someone who's prepared to do what it takes is worth gold.

Like I say, I'd have a real good chat to Messicks, and if that talk works out like I think it would based on what I've seen of them, I'd ask them if they have a job for you. Then I'd pack your stuff in your truck and drive to PA. One thing you can afford to do when you're young is take risks. Worst that can happen is you don't like it, you pack your stuff back in your truck and drive home. Best that can happen is you get great learning from one of the better dealerships in the USA. One of the nice things about moving away from home is it breaks your old habits and makes you much more self reliant - your friends aren't hanging around saying "you can't do that", and nobody knows you so you're only as good as what you bring to work every day - no history hanging around for people to judge you on.
 
   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #34  
Left Coast rates. Wouldn’t command half of that at an ag shop in the Southeast.

Just like everything else. Looking at Lincoln County housing for sale on Realtor.com, it looks like we're about 50% more here for comparable homes. We're in the low end of California pricing. Taxes on property, purchases, and incomes are high here, as is insurance. New cars are close to the same, but may last longer here.

Still, a teacher with a Master's degree and 30 years experience makes less than this 28 year old high school graduate here in the Central Valley of California. It would not surprise me if that's true in most of the country.
 
   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #35  
Growing up, I thought tech was the future. But most jobs are just more cookie cutter, low paying positions. A few hours training, a laptop loaded with proprietary software, and a highschool kid can troubleshoot a complex engine. OR, someone overseas (that lives in a cardboard box) , via an internet connection.

Stopped by a friends shop today. He was building cylinder rods for a large local CASE/NH dealership. This (young) man will never find himself out of work. He has a hundred times the work, he can handle. I think he should charge more! You need to find something to do, that is in demand and few can do.
 
   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #36  
I just read in Equipment World Mag that most big dealers like Cat,JD,Komatsu, etc are going into high schools and finding young people to train to be diesel techs. Some are even paying for all education if tech will sign contract to work 4 years after graduating. Article went on to state six figure income in early 20's. Now a lot of this was happening in middle US but I'm sure there are mechanic shortages everywhere . Here in NC there is a company hiring kids right out of high school to train into electricians. There is a huge shortage of plumbers , electricians and such now days. No one wants to get sweaty and dirty anymore.
 
   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #37  
I know tech companies who complain they can't find qualified and motivated employees. But, they won't pay either. Maybe twice minimum wage, tops! For some very skilled work. Those reported figures shock me!
 
   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #39  
We just celebrated our son's graduation yesterday.
During the ceremony, the student's future was announced and it does entirely reflect above statements.
Our son is the only one who's goal is red seal diesel mechanic out of 23 graduates. And this is a small school out in the country.
 
   / becoming a tractor mechanic/tech #40  
We just celebrated our son's graduation yesterday.
During the ceremony, the student's future was announced and it does entirely reflect above statements.
Our son is the only one who's goal is red seal diesel mechanic out of 23 graduates. And this is a small school out in the country.

Congratulations to you and your son! That's great. Learning any mechanical trade really opens up his future.
Country kids are often exposed to mechanical skills from their rural upbringing, and that's one huge advantage for jobs & education.
rScotty
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

CFG MH12RX Mini Excavator (A49461)
CFG MH12RX Mini...
2004 STERLING LT9500 SERIES MIXER TRUCK (A50854)
2004 STERLING...
BUSH WACKER ST-180 ELITE BATWING ROTARY MOWER (A51406)
BUSH WACKER ST-180...
2018 CATERPILLAR 326FL EXCAVATOR (A51242)
2018 CATERPILLAR...
2004 INTERNATIONAL 4300 CARGO TRUCK (A50854)
2004 INTERNATIONAL...
2008 TEREX USA LLC LIGHT TOWER (A50854)
2008 TEREX USA LLC...
 
Top