DiscoverWELDApprentice to Journeyman: The Reality of ‘Sixth Period’ and What Comes Next with Robert Carpenter
Apprentice to Journeyman: The Reality of ‘Sixth Period’ and What Comes Next with Robert Carpenter

Apprentice to Journeyman: The Reality of ‘Sixth Period’ and What Comes Next with Robert Carpenter

Update: 2025-08-25
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Description

In this episode, host Beau Wigington chats with Robert Carpenter (Carp Welding)—a pipefitter and stainless TIG art creator—about his path into Pipefitters Local 636 (Detroit), what a sixth-period apprentice actually does on the job, and why he chose union life to stay close to home. 


Key Topics Covered:

  • Why Robert chose the union: home nightly, benefits that keep continuity from job to job.

  • What “laid off” really means in the union—and how the hall gets you back working.

  • Apprentice responsibilities: working under a journeyman, proving you can weld to earn more hood time.

  • Getting real welding time: how company choice affects whether you actually weld.

  • TIG art and bracelets: making stainless and copper pieces without burning out.

  • Welding copper bracelets: cleanliness, gas/cup, and dialing amperage with a foot pedal.

  • Avoiding creator burnout: setting order limits when social posts take off.

  • Career crossroads: staying an employee vs. starting a pipefitting/mechanical business.

  • Work-life balance: finding a non-welding escape (hello, sport bike) to stay fresh.


Memorable Quotes:

  • As an apprentice, you’re always working with a journeyman—but you’re doing all the work.”

  • “You get laid off the first time, it’s gonna feel like a breakup… but it’s not personal.”

  • “I like showing up, putting my hood down, and clocking out. Sometimes I like not having a ton of that stress.”


Practical Takeaways (Welding Pain Points Solved)

  • Union stability 101: Layoffs are often just a slowdown; call the hall and get re-dispatched—sometimes by Monday.

  • Insurance that follows you: In the union, you’re not re-starting benefits at each new site; work and coverage stay centralized.

  • Earn your arc time: Demonstrate ability early so journeymen hand you more welding (not just fitting).

  • If you want to weld, choose your contractor wisely: Some shops barely weld; others are 40 hours under the hood.

  • Copper bracelet TIG basics: Start ultra-clean to avoid pitting/porosity, use 100% argon and a larger cup, set machine high (~220 A available) but actually run around ~60 A with foot control so you’ve got headroom.

  • Beat burnout on side gigs: Repetition is real, set order caps and batch work so socials don’t turn into 70 overnight deadlines..


Resources Mentioned:


Save 20% On Related American Welding Program Courses With WELD20 - https://foxly.link/t8aJ0M


Guest's Content & Contact:


Connect with Beau Wigington


Download the WELD App:


https://foxly.link/Qj0VEa

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Apprentice to Journeyman: The Reality of ‘Sixth Period’ and What Comes Next with Robert Carpenter

Apprentice to Journeyman: The Reality of ‘Sixth Period’ and What Comes Next with Robert Carpenter

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