Precision Production Technician

    Metal Fabrication & Machining

    CIP Name: Precision Production Specialist|CIP Code: 48.0000

    Apply technical knowledge and skills in creating products using precision crafting and technical illustration.

    $0K
    Median Salary
    +0%
    Job Growth
    6mo-1.5yr
    Training
    0.0K
    Jobs/Year

    What Precision Production Technicians Do

    Apply technical knowledge and skills in creating products using precision crafting and technical illustration.

    Work Environment

    Locations

    • • Manufacturing plants
    • • Machine shops
    • • Aerospace and defense facilities
    • • Medical device manufacturing sites
    • • Quality control and metrology labs

    Schedule

    Most jobs run full-time on day, evening, or overnight shifts, with overtime common during production deadlines.

    Physical Demands

    Work often involves standing for long periods, repetitive hand motions, and lifting materials or fixtures. Strong attention to safety is needed around moving machinery, sharp tools, and noise.

    Salary & Job Outlook

    Median $0
    $0$0+
    Entry Level
    10th percentile
    $0
    Median
    50th percentile
    $0
    Top Earners
    90th percentile
    $0+

    Top Paying States

    State salary data not yet available for this trade.

    Why Demand May Grow

    Demand may grow as manufacturers expand high-precision work for aerospace, medical devices, and advanced electronics. More companies also need workers who can read technical drawings and operate modern CNC and measurement equipment.

    Skills You'll Need

    Blueprint and technical drawing readingPrecision measurement (calipers, micrometers, gauges)Basic CNC and machine operationAttention to detail and quality mindsetMechanical aptitude and troubleshootingMath skills (fractions, decimals, tolerances)Safety awareness and PPE useTime management and teamwork

    Pros & Cons

    Pros

    • Hands-on work making real products
    • Skills transfer across many industries
    • Opportunities to specialize (CNC, inspection, tooling)
    • Clear pathways to higher pay with experience
    • Work is often indoors in controlled environments

    Cons

    • Shift work and overtime can be frequent
    • High responsibility for accuracy and scrap reduction
    • Noise, coolant, and metal dust exposure in some shops
    • Repetitive tasks can cause strain injuries
    • Work can slow during manufacturing downturns
    FAQ

    Common Questions About the Precision Production Technician Trade

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