Industrial Assemblers Contractors

Find skilled automation professionals specializing in mechanical and electro-mechanical machine build, sub-assembly, panel build, and production assembly.

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Where can I hire a Assembly professional?

Automate America is an industrial automation marketplace where manufacturers connect with skilled assembly contractors. Browse professional profiles, review project histories, and send a direct work request. Projects typically receive qualified contractor responses within 24 hours.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does an industrial assembler do?

An industrial assembler builds machinery, equipment, and production units from drawings and bills of material. They fit mechanical components — frames, motors, bearings, guarding — and handle electro-mechanical work like wiring, connector termination, and panel build. They torque to spec, follow work instructions, and test assemblies with continuity, leak, and functional checks before shipment.

What’s the difference between a mechanical and an electro-mechanical assembler?

A mechanical assembler focuses on the physical build — frames, drives, bearings, and guarding. An electro-mechanical assembler adds wiring, harnessing, sensor and actuator mounting, and panel build to a wiring diagram. Electro-mechanical assemblers read schematics and typically command higher rates for the added electrical skill.

How much do industrial assembler contractors charge?

Contract industrial assemblers typically post $22–$40 per hour. General production assemblers sit near the low end; electro-mechanical and machine-build assemblers who read schematics and wire panels reach the upper end, with top complex-machine and aerospace assemblers posting around $45 per hour.

What certifications matter for an industrial assembler?

Useful credentials include OSHA 10/30, IPC-A-610 for electronics and electro-mechanical assembly, soldering certification, and forklift or overhead-crane operation. For most build work, a proven record of clean, accurate assemblies from prints and the ability to read schematics matter most to a hiring shop.

Can contract assemblers support machine build and automation cells?

Yes. Machine building and automation-cell assembly are core contract work — assemblers build frames, sub-assemblies, robot cells, dunnage, and end-of-arm tooling, then test and verify before shipment. Contractors are routinely brought in to hit shipment deadlines and cover skilled-labor gaps in OEM and integrator shops.

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