Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$110 per hour is good money, more than a living wage. Plus fewer education expenses. Seems like a steady occupation, why don't more kids train for this job?
i think the real question is why there is such a low percentage of women working as mechanics. We have to work in increasing the percentage of mechanics that are women. This is an atrocity. There must be a glass ceiling that must be broken.
Anonymous wrote:$110 per hour is good money, more than a living wage. Plus fewer education expenses. Seems like a steady occupation, why don't more kids train for this job?
Anonymous wrote:Even if mechanics were netting$110k per hr, it is real, hard work and they would be earning every penny. Mechanic work is also physically hazardous and they are regularly exposed to chemicals, etc. They also have to work in unpleasant conditions....think working in hot, humid days in garages with no AC.
Anonymous wrote:I worked the counter at a car dealership service bay in high school. The mechanic has a book that says how long a typical job will take (say a tire change = 1 hour). So they bill an hour of labor. But really if they are fast and/or sloppy, they can do it in 20 minutes. So they can charge for "one hour of labor" for only 20 minutes of work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is standard to bill someone out at 2.5 times their hourly wage to cover overhead, so the mechanic would be making 40-45 per hour.
College graduates have lifetime earnings that are 60% greater than high school grads. That of course is an average across all fields. The gap is even bigger when you account for the fact that the plumbers etc. have trouble doing the physical work past age 50-55. Plumbers still working past that age generally own the business. They assume the risk of stocking pricey supplies and paying wages; the people who work for them doing the actual plumbing are paid hourly.
College grads also have skills that are broadly applicable to a lot of jobs: writing skills, computer skills etc. A journalist can become a teacher. People in the trades are pretty focused, and their skills can become obsolete quickly.
Really? There will come a day where toilets don't need to be fixed? Your heater always works perfectly? New homes don't need air conditioning installed?
Umm, OK. And you do realize that plumbers, mechanics, etc. have education beyond high school, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is standard to bill someone out at 2.5 times their hourly wage to cover overhead, so the mechanic would be making 40-45 per hour.
College graduates have lifetime earnings that are 60% greater than high school grads. That of course is an average across all fields. The gap is even bigger when you account for the fact that the plumbers etc. have trouble doing the physical work past age 50-55. Plumbers still working past that age generally own the business. They assume the risk of stocking pricey supplies and paying wages; the people who work for them doing the actual plumbing are paid hourly.
College grads also have skills that are broadly applicable to a lot of jobs: writing skills, computer skills etc. A journalist can become a teacher. People in the trades are pretty focused, and their skills can become obsolete quickly.
Yes, but if you are a college educated person in your 40 or 50's and you get laid off, it would be difficult for you to just hang out a shingle and go into business for yourself. People in the trade can usually make their own living if they had to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is standard to bill someone out at 2.5 times their hourly wage to cover overhead, so the mechanic would be making 40-45 per hour.
College graduates have lifetime earnings that are 60% greater than high school grads. That of course is an average across all fields. The gap is even bigger when you account for the fact that the plumbers etc. have trouble doing the physical work past age 50-55. Plumbers still working past that age generally own the business. They assume the risk of stocking pricey supplies and paying wages; the people who work for them doing the actual plumbing are paid hourly.
College grads also have skills that are broadly applicable to a lot of jobs: writing skills, computer skills etc. A journalist can become a teacher. People in the trades are pretty focused, and their skills can become obsolete quickly.
Yes, but if you are a college educated person in your 40 or 50's and you get laid off, it would be difficult for you to just hang out a shingle and go into business for yourself. People in the trade can usually make their own living if they had to.
Anonymous wrote:It is standard to bill someone out at 2.5 times their hourly wage to cover overhead, so the mechanic would be making 40-45 per hour.
College graduates have lifetime earnings that are 60% greater than high school grads. That of course is an average across all fields. The gap is even bigger when you account for the fact that the plumbers etc. have trouble doing the physical work past age 50-55. Plumbers still working past that age generally own the business. They assume the risk of stocking pricey supplies and paying wages; the people who work for them doing the actual plumbing are paid hourly.
College grads also have skills that are broadly applicable to a lot of jobs: writing skills, computer skills etc. A journalist can become a teacher. People in the trades are pretty focused, and their skills can become obsolete quickly.
Anonymous wrote:It is standard to bill someone out at 2.5 times their hourly wage to cover overhead, so the mechanic would be making 40-45 per hour.
College graduates have lifetime earnings that are 60% greater than high school grads. That of course is an average across all fields. The gap is even bigger when you account for the fact that the plumbers etc. have trouble doing the physical work past age 50-55. Plumbers still working past that age generally own the business. They assume the risk of stocking pricey supplies and paying wages; the people who work for them doing the actual plumbing are paid hourly.
College grads also have skills that are broadly applicable to a lot of jobs: writing skills, computer skills etc. A journalist can become a teacher. People in the trades are pretty focused, and their skills can become obsolete quickly.
Anonymous wrote:It is standard to bill someone out at 2.5 times their hourly wage to cover overhead, so the mechanic would be making 40-45 per hour.
College graduates have lifetime earnings that are 60% greater than high school grads. That of course is an average across all fields. The gap is even bigger when you account for the fact that the plumbers etc. have trouble doing the physical work past age 50-55. Plumbers still working past that age generally own the business. They assume the risk of stocking pricey supplies and paying wages; the people who work for them doing the actual plumbing are paid hourly.
College grads also have skills that are broadly applicable to a lot of jobs: writing skills, computer skills etc. A journalist can become a teacher. People in the trades are pretty focused, and their skills can become obsolete quickly.