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10+ LinkedIn Post Examples for Welders (2026)

Updated 5/28/2026

Welders have incredible opportunities to showcase their craftsmanship and expertise on LinkedIn. Your work creates the backbone of infrastructure, manufacturing, and construction projects that shape our world. From intricate artistic pieces to critical structural joints that ensure public safety, your skills deserve recognition and can attract better opportunities, clients, and collaborations.

LinkedIn allows you to highlight the technical precision, problem-solving abilities, and safety expertise that define professional welding. Whether you're sharing a challenging repair job, discussing new welding techniques, or mentoring apprentices, your posts can demonstrate the depth of knowledge required in modern welding trades. This visibility can lead to higher-paying positions, specialized project opportunities, and connections with other skilled tradespeople and industry professionals.

1. Project Showcase Post

Use this when you've completed a particularly challenging or visually impressive welding project that demonstrates your skills and attention to detail.

Just finished a complex stainless steel fabrication job for [Company/Client Name] - 316L grade with full penetration welds on 3/8" plate.

The challenge: Maintaining consistent heat input while welding in all positions, including overhead sections that required perfect root pass penetration.

Key techniques used:
- TIG welding with argon back-purging for oxidation prevention
- Multi-pass technique with interpass temperature control
- Visual and dye penetrant testing for quality assurance

Every joint passed inspection on first try. When you take time to prep properly and control your variables, the results speak for themselves.

What's the most challenging position welding job you've tackled recently?

#Welding #Fabrication #QualityControl #StainlessSteel

2. Safety Lesson Post

Share this type when you want to emphasize important safety practices or when you've witnessed or prevented a safety incident.

Reminder: Arc flash can cause third-degree burns in less than a second.

Yesterday I saw someone welding without proper PPE - just safety glasses and cotton gloves. Here's what every welder needs:

Minimum protection:
- Auto-darkening helmet with proper shade (10-13 for most arc welding)
- Flame-resistant jacket and pants
- Leather gloves rated for welding temperatures
- Safety boots with metatarsal guards
- Proper ventilation or respirator when needed

Your vision and skin can't be replaced. I've seen too many experienced welders get complacent with PPE because "it's just a quick tack."

There are no quick jobs when it comes to safety.

#WeldingSafety #PPE #ArcFlash #WorkplaceSafety

3. Technique Tutorial Post

Use this when you want to share specific welding knowledge or tips that could help other welders improve their craft.

Getting porosity in your aluminum welds? Here's what's probably happening:

Most common causes I see:
- Contaminated base metal (oils, paint, oxidation)
- Dirty filler rod
- Insufficient gas coverage
- Too fast travel speed
- Moisture in the gas line

My process for clean aluminum TIG welds:
1. Clean with stainless steel brush (dedicated to aluminum only)
2. Acetone wipe to remove any residue
3. Check gas flow rate - 15-20 CFH for most applications
4. Use fresh filler rod, keep it clean during welding
5. Maintain consistent arc length and travel speed

The extra 5 minutes of prep saves hours of grinding and re-welding.

What's your go-to method for aluminum prep?

#AluminumWelding #TIGWelding #WeldingTips #QualityControl

4. Equipment Review Post

Share this when you've tested new welding equipment, tools, or consumables and want to give your professional opinion.

Three months with the [Equipment Brand/Model] and here's my honest take:

Background: Needed a portable MIG unit for field repairs on heavy equipment. Previously used [Previous Equipment].

What I like:
- Consistent arc starts even on rusty steel
- Good penetration control for varying thicknesses
- Actual portability - fits in truck without a crane
- Wire feed stays smooth even with cheaper consumables

Where it falls short:
- Gas solenoid occasionally sticks in humid conditions
- Display is hard to read in bright sunlight
- Price point is steep for smaller shops

Bottom line: Solid choice for mobile welding operations, but might be overkill for shop-only work.

Anyone else running this unit? What's been your experience?

#WeldingEquipment #MIGWelding #FieldWelding #EquipmentReview

5. Apprentice Mentoring Post

Use this to share wisdom with newer welders or highlight the importance of proper training and skill development.

To the apprentice who asked about getting faster with stick welding:

Speed comes from consistency, not rushing.

Focus on these fundamentals first:
- Steady hand position and arc length
- Consistent travel angle and work angle
- Proper amperage for your rod size and position
- Reading the puddle, not just following the joint

I've seen welders try to speed up before mastering these basics. Result? More grinding, more repairs, more time wasted.

Master 7018 in flat position first. Get your starts and stops clean. Then progress to horizontal, vertical, overhead.

Each position teaches you something new about puddle control.

The welder who takes time to learn proper technique will always outproduce the one who rushes through fundamentals.

What advice would you give to someone just starting their welding career?

#WeldingApprentice #StickWelding #WeldingEducation #Mentorship

6. Industry Standards Post

Share when discussing certification requirements, code compliance, or industry regulations that affect welding work.

AWS D1.1 structural welding certification renewal coming up.

For those unfamiliar: This cert covers welding on structural steel per American Welding Society standards. Required for most commercial construction and bridge work.

Test requirements:
- 3/8" plate in 3G and 4G positions
- 1" plate groove weld in 2G position
- Visual inspection plus destructive testing
- Must demonstrate proficiency with specified procedures

Why it matters: Projects following AWS D1.1 have specific joint requirements, inspection criteria, and welder qualification standards. Your cert proves you can meet those standards consistently.

Renewal every 6 months if you're welding regularly, or retest if you've been out of the process.

The standards exist because structural welds literally hold up buildings and bridges.

Which certifications are most valuable in your area of welding?

#AWS #WeldingCertification #StructuralWelding #QualityStandards

7. Problem-Solving Post

Use this when you've encountered and solved a difficult welding challenge that other professionals might face.

Repair challenge: Cracked cast iron engine block on 40-year-old equipment.

The problem: Customer couldn't source replacement parts. Crack ran through water jacket - complete failure would mean scrapping a $50K machine.

My approach:
1. Machined out crack with angle grinder to sound metal
2. Preheated entire block to 500°F in shop oven
3. Used nickel rod with slow cooling process
4. Post-weld stress relief heat treatment
5. Pressure tested water jacket before reassembly

Result: Repair held through full season of operation. Customer saved replacement cost and downtime.

Cast iron repairs aren't always successful, but proper heat management and technique selection make the difference.

Sometimes the "impossible" repair is just waiting for the right approach.

#CastIronWelding #RepairWelding #ProblemSolving #HeatTreatment

8. Career Development Post

Share when discussing career progression, specialization opportunities, or professional growth in the welding field.

Five years ago I was doing basic MIG work in a production shop.

Today I'm certified in underwater welding and working on offshore platforms.

The path wasn't obvious at first:
- Started with AWS fundamentals
- Added pipe welding certification
- Learned commercial diving
- Combined skills for underwater wet welding specialty

Key lessons:
- Specialized skills command premium rates
- Continuous learning opens doors you didn't know existed
- Network with welders in different industries
- Don't be afraid to invest in training that seems unrelated

Underwater welding isn't for everyone, but finding your niche in welding can transform your career.

What specialization has made the biggest impact on your welding career?

#CareerDevelopment #UnderwaterWelding #Specialization #WeldingCareer

9. Quality Control Post

Use this to discuss inspection methods, testing procedures, or quality standards that ensure welding integrity.

Magnetic particle testing revealed what visual inspection missed.

Project: Critical pressure vessel welds, 1/2" carbon steel plate.

Visual inspection looked perfect - good bead profile, no obvious defects, consistent coloration.

MT testing showed:
- Hairline crack in heat affected zone
- Small inclusion near weld toe
- Both defects below visual detection threshold

This is why NDT exists. Pressure vessels don't give second chances.

Rejected the welds, ground out defects, re-welded with adjusted parameters.

Final MT test: Clean results.

Your eyes are your first inspection tool, but they're not your last.

What NDT methods do you rely on for critical applications?

#NonDestructiveTesting #QualityControl #PressureVessel #WeldInspection

10. Tool Maintenance Post

Share when discussing proper care and maintenance of welding equipment and tools.

Spent this morning rebuilding my MIG gun - here's why regular maintenance matters:

Signs it was time:
- Inconsistent wire feed
- Contact tip burning out every few hours
- Gas coverage becoming spotty
- Handle getting hot during normal use

Maintenance performed:
- Replaced liner and contact tips
- Cleaned gas diffuser
- Inspected cable connections
- Lubricated wire feed mechanism

Cost: $45 in parts, 2 hours of time
Alternative: New gun at $300 plus downtime waiting for delivery

Your equipment works as hard as you do. Take care of it and it takes care of you.

How often do you service your welding equipment?

#WeldingMaintenance #MIGWelding #EquipmentCare #PreventiveMaintenance

11. Fabrication Process Post

Use this when showcasing the step-by-step process of creating a custom fabrication project.

Custom staircase fabrication from start to finish:

Client specs: 14 steps, 42" wide, industrial finish, must support 300 lbs per step.

Design phase:
- Calculated load requirements for stringers
- Selected 1/4" plate treads with diamond pattern
- 2x12 channel stringers with proper rise/run ratio

Fabrication sequence:
1. Cut all components with plasma cutter
2. Beveled stringer connections for full penetration welds
3. Jigged assembly to maintain square and level
4. TIG welded all structural connections
5. Ground and finished all visible welds

Final inspection: All welds passed visual and dye penetrant testing.

Total time: 16 hours fabrication, 4 hours finishing.

Every custom job teaches you something new about planning and execution.

#CustomFabrication #Welding #MetalWork #StairFabrication

12. Industry Innovation Post

Share when discussing new welding technologies, techniques, or industry developments that affect professional welding.

Laser welding is changing what's possible in precision fabrication.

Just completed training on fiber laser welding systems. The capabilities are impressive:

Advantages over traditional arc welding:
- Minimal heat input reduces distortion
- Precise control allows welding dissimilar metals
- Speed increases of 3-5x on thin materials
- No filler metal required for many applications

Limitations:
- High equipment cost
- Requires excellent fit-up
- Limited to thinner materials
- Specialized training needed

This isn't replacing stick or MIG welding for structural work, but it's opening new possibilities for aerospace, medical devices, and precision manufacturing.

Technology keeps evolving. The welders who adapt stay ahead.

What new welding technology has impacted your work recently?

#LaserWelding #WeldingTechnology #Innovation #PrecisionWelding

Best Practices for Welders on LinkedIn

  • Share high-quality photos of your work, but always get client permission first and avoid showing proprietary designs or processes
  • Use technical terminology correctly - your expertise shows through precise language about processes, materials, and standards
  • Engage with posts from other skilled trades, manufacturers, and construction professionals to build a broader network
  • Highlight safety practices consistently - it demonstrates professionalism and can prevent accidents in your industry
  • Include relevant certifications and continuing education in your posts to showcase your commitment to professional development
  • Connect with welding inspectors, engineers, and project managers who specify welding work - they're often decision-makers for contracts

Ready to build your professional presence and attract better welding opportunities? Writio can help you maintain a consistent posting schedule and grow your LinkedIn network strategically. Try Writio today to take your welding career to the next level.

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