Ibid on $15 per hour and $100 per hour (billed). I'm in the $75.00 per hour (billed) in anything my guys work on electrically I supervise = all. It is good that you are somewhat comparable to other tech's and competent.
Base of professional experience and time in grade should shorten that pay grade growth length... but everyone starts in slinging the cable and learning from it. Everyone also learns from those experts that get paid on that
level. If you can in not knowing about you, go to college, get that degree in electronics with a minor in theater or that in reverse. Those with the degree seem to progress faster than those without - even if an aptitude. There is a
base of knowledge you can learn at school that helps
advance you - still going to
sling cable at some
point, but less time in doing so. Try to be humble in your advertised abilities. Yes you might be really good at fixing moving lights, but there is thousands of other's that perhaps are just as good and have field experience.
Hope it helps in a given your drive will get you there if you work and study hard, but if you have to ask the price, you cannot afford it yet. It's similar and not as easy as you might assume. A lot more to learn based on education and experience. My own salary - and is salary, was earned in being good but not excellent for pay... was earned
thru almost 20 years where I work and another 8 before in the industry - plus college and personal study and further work on my part into what I do. I'm good with my end result until I retire. Hopefully you can learn more, educate more and strive more in getting to.. what is your goal? Got to mine. Do you just want to repair moving lights for a living?
I can tell you of some happy people doing that and other things in adventure, and some very not happy people just doing that - most of them with that task for career, no matter the pay. Fixtures despised for commonly broken parts constantly having to replace - they write up reports on but don't get an upgrade, Huge
fixture upgrade problems they see but sometimes raise or not realize, than the battle of getting that upgrade. Repair tickets for everything done and parts used, Frequently having to go to an actual anvil so as to pound some bent plate
flat again - constantly on the same type of light.... Cleaning out the insides of a
fixture after a lamp explosion, than trying to figure out why this amongst a hundred fixtures had this problem, but often told "silly American there is no problem." I find moving light repair tech people - especially if they get to the shop either very well educated in running the place. in at times having fun, or completely frustrating. Remember every hour and part you use is tracked, and you have to detail in report what you do. Stuff constantly rolling into the door to repair, but a single repair can take minutes or hours if back ordered parts not to fix.
Moving light tech's on the
road.. tour experience I would suspect before you get there - slinging cable before working on the lights. Don't know about the above people but I as the lamp inspector find most tour moving light tech people are best served in serving burgers frequently. Can't reset lamp hours on a
fixture, or fill out the questions on the replacement lamp box. That much less and more important ask the question of why this lamp failed - this even if at 50 hours and the lamp they removed had a pin that they had to literaly rip out of it's lamp
socket why they would put a new lamp back into it. Has been instances of "because we had to", but limited times when the
fixture was also marked to replace for repair after. Just that second step saves a few hundred dollars when absolutely necessary. Many just put a perfectly good lamp into it with a bad
socket, or indications of a bad
ballast again. Why did the lamp fail? "bad." Because they are just "Roadies" OR IA "professionals. Granted many of either are good at what they do, others are very bad - paid the same. Hope you can get to a next generation
level.