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McMinnville Welding

  • Region

    Sacramento Valley

  • USDA zone

    9b

  • Services

    0

  • Providers

    0

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Why Agnomy

Why book welding on Agnomy?

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Providers know welding timing, regional conditions, and best practices in your area.

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Explore other ag service categories

See the full range of ag work available in McMinnville. Jump into another category to find the providers, services, and crops that fit your operation.

Frequently asked

Answers for growers

What growers ask before they book welding services on Agnomy.

  • How much does mobile welding cost?

    Mobile welding generally costs more than shop work because of travel, fuel, and on-site setup. Hourly rates commonly run from about $50 to $150, and mobile calls often carry a one-hour minimum or trip charge to cover showing up. On-site field service typically adds 20 to 30 percent over in-shop rates. For breakdowns during planting or harvest, repair in the field often justifies the premium.

  • What is mobile welding and how does it work for farms?

    Mobile welding is on-site welding and repair where the welder brings a truck-mounted rig, generator, and tools directly to your farm or field. This lets growers fix broken equipment without hauling heavy machinery to a shop, which is critical during time-sensitive work like harvest. Mobile welders handle cracked frames, broken hitches, hydraulic mounts, and structural repairs on the spot. Many also do custom fabrication.

  • Can a welder repair cracked or broken farm equipment?

    Yes, welders routinely repair cracked frames, broken implement parts, hitch and bucket damage, and worn hydraulic cylinder mounts on farm equipment. Repairs range from a few hundred dollars for a simple crack to $1,500 or more for major structural work like rebuilding a loader arm. A good welder will also reinforce weak points to prevent the same failure from recurring. Repair is usually far cheaper than replacing the implement.

  • What is the difference between welding and fabrication?

    Welding joins existing metal pieces together, while fabrication builds new parts or structures from raw material by cutting, forming, and welding to a design. On a farm, welding often means repairing a broken part, whereas fabrication might mean building a custom bracket, gate, trailer, or equipment modification. Many ag welders do both. Fabrication jobs are often quoted as a project price because material and time can be hard to estimate up front.

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