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Skills Based Training Vs Career Degree Path with Aaron Wulk
22 minutes Posted Sep 1, 2025 at 9:00 am.
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Show notes

In this episode, host Beau Wigington chats with Aaron Wulk, Director of Applied Technical Programs at South Piedmont Community College, about real-world Inconel tips, ATF certification, and how to choose the right career track in welding.


Key Topics Covered:

  • Inconel vs. carbon steel fundamentals: shielding gas (100% argon vs. 75/25), puddle behavior (sluggish vs. fluid), voltage pitfalls, and trusting the puddle.

  • Hot cracking explained: why rapid heat dissipation makes welds brittle, and how preheat/postheat and heat input control (TIG vs. MIG) help.

  • Process selection by application: when MIG on Inconel makes sense (e.g., heavy foundry repairs) and why TIG often offers better heat control.

  • Common mistakes: impatience, poor cleaning, and skipping interpass cleanup—how these quietly ruin otherwise good work.

  • Stick on Inconel: why it’s “ropey,” erratic, and just plain difficult—and how to approach it if you must.

  • Where you’ll find Inconel: aerospace, nuclear, high-performance automotive, corrosive/chemical plants, and foundry reclamation.

  • Career-driven vs. degree-driven training: stackable short-term certificates, evening classes, and how to upskill without pausing your life.

  • ATF (Accredited Testing Facility) basics: QA manuals, heat numbers, procedure control, documentation, and why it’s a resume builder (not a bypass).

  • Certs that travel vs. in-house: six-month renewal realities and why portable credentials matter when you change jobs.

  • Thriving in your first shop: “be quiet and listen,” pick up tricks from veterans, and plug into a community that levels everyone up.

  • Metal art & learning by making: how aesthetics, controlled “mistakes,” and SkillsUSA sculpture build real process understanding.


Memorable Quotes:

  • Trust that the puddle is doing its job.

  • Stick welding Inconel? It’s gonna suck… more erratic, ropey puddle.

  • Be quiet and listen. You don’t know everything about welding on day one.”

  • “If you’re helping that person be better, you’re helping the whole industry be better.”


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