title: Ironworker
slug: ironworker
aliases:
  - structural ironworker
  - steel erector
  - rebar/reinforcing ironworker
category: Skilled Trades
tags:
  - steel-erection
  - rigging
  - bolting
  - fall-protection
  - construction
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  How an expert ironworker thinks in stable structural states and engineered
  connections, keeping a half-built frame standing while tensioning every bolt
  to spec at lethal height.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: welder
    type: collaboration
    note: joins moment connections; many ironworkers weld their own
  - slug: structural-engineer
    type: prerequisite
    note: designs the frame, connection details, and erection sequence
  - slug: heavy-equipment-operator
    type: collaboration
    note: the crane operator is the ironworker's partner on every pick
  - slug: glazier
    type: adjacent
    note: hangs curtain wall on the steel the ironworker erects
  - slug: carpenter
    type: related
    note: shares the framing-the-skeleton mindset in a different material
specializations:
  - structural (erection) ironworker
  - reinforcing (rebar) ironworker
  - ornamental/architectural ironworker
  - rigger/machinery mover
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: AISC Steel Construction Manual
    kind: book
  - title: OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R (Steel Erection)
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A steel building is a thousand separate pieces that have to become one
      rigid

      frame standing hundreds of feet in the air, and someone has to be up there

      making the connections while the structure is only partly there to hold
      them. An

      ironworker exists to raise, fit, connect, and lock that steel into a
      stable frame

      — and to do it without falling, without dropping anything on the people
      below,

      and without leaving a connection that looks tight but isn't. The work
      matters

      because the steel frame is the skeleton everything else hangs on, and
      because the

      ironworker spends the workday at the lethal intersection of great weight,
      great

      height, and a structure that isn't finished resisting gravity until the
      last bolt

      or weld is in.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Erect the structural frame plumb, level, and true, make every connection
      to the

      engineer's specified strength — properly tensioned bolts or sound welds —
      and

      keep the partially built structure stable at every stage, so it stands as

      designed and no one is hurt putting it up.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      Rigging and signaling the crane to fly steel; landing, fitting, and
      pinning beams

      and columns; bolting up connections with drift pins and impact wrenches
      and

      tensioning them to spec; welding moment connections and reinforcing;
      plumbing and

      aligning the frame with come-alongs and turnbuckles; installing decking,
      rebar,

      and curtain wall steel; and — for the reinforcing branch — placing and
      tying rebar

      before the concrete pour. Underneath all of it is connecting: walking
      iron,

      catching a swinging load, lining up holes, and tying off. The first and
      last

      question on any connection is whether it's strong enough to carry what it
      must

      before the next piece lands on it.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **The structure isn't stable until it's connected and braced.** A landed
      beam
        with two pins is not a finished connection; the frame is a sequence of
        temporary conditions, each of which must be stable before you load the next.
      - **One hundred percent tie-off.** Above the threshold height (OSHA 1926
      Subpart
        R for steel erection), you are anchored — two lanyards, leapfrogged so you're
        never unhooked, on a rated point. The fall is the trade's deadliest hazard.
      - **Control the load; never get under it or in the bite.** The crane and
      the
        rigging do the lifting; the ironworker's life depends on standing clear of the
        swing, the load path, and the snap-back of a failed line.
      - **A bolt isn't done until it's tensioned to spec.** Snug-tight is a
      stage, not
        the finish. Slip-critical and pretensioned joints are tightened by turn-of-nut,
        DTI washers, or tension-control bolts and verified — "tight enough" has a
        number.
      - **Plumb and true before you lock it in.** Steel is aligned while the
        connections are still snug; once welded or fully tensioned, the frame's geometry
        is fixed.
      - **Communicate by the signal, not by assumption.** Crane signals are a
      fixed
        language; one signalman, clear hand or radio signals, and "stop" from anyone.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The frame as a sequence of stable states.** Erection is not "assemble
      the
        whole thing then connect it"; it's land, pin, plumb, bolt, brace — each piece
        brought to a stable condition before the next, so the partial structure never
        becomes a domino.
      - **Connections transfer specific forces.** A shear connection (clip
      angle, shear
        tab) carries vertical load and lets the beam rotate; a moment connection (welded
        or fully bolted flanges) carries bending and makes the joint rigid. The
        ironworker reads which is which from the detail and connects accordingly.
      - **Bolt pretension as clamping force, not just tightness.** A
      high-strength bolt
        in a slip-critical joint works by clamping the plates so friction carries the
        load. The tension in the bolt is the engineered quantity; that's why it's
        measured, not guessed.
      - **Center of gravity and the pick.** Every lift is rigged so the load
      hangs level
        and predictable; choke, basket, and bridle hitches and the sling angle change
        the force in each leg. Misjudge the CG and the load swings or the sling fails.
      - **Load multiplied by sling angle.** As a two-leg sling's angle to
      horizontal
        decreases, the tension in each leg rises sharply; a shallow sling angle can
        double the line load over the bare weight.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - A partially erected steel frame is only as stable as its current
      connections
        and bracing; gravity tests every temporary state.
      - A bolted connection carries its rated load only at its specified
      pretension;
        below it, the joint can slip or the bolt can fatigue.
      - A weld is only as strong as its fusion and its freedom from defects; a
      pretty
        bead over poor penetration is a hidden failure.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Is this connection stable enough to land the next piece, or do I need
      bracing
        first?
      - Is the bolt snug-tight or fully tensioned — what does this joint
      require, and
        is it verified?
      - Where's the load path and the bite — am I clear of the swing and the
      snap-back?

      - Am I tied off to a rated point right now, with continuous fall
      protection as I
        move?
      - Is the frame plumb and true before I lock these connections?

      - Is this a shear or a moment connection, and have I made it the way the
      detail
        calls for?
      - What's the wind doing, and is it still safe to fly steel?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Bolted vs. welded connection.** Bolting is faster, inspectable on the
      spot,
        and weather-tolerant; field welding is for moment connections and where the
        detail demands continuity. Follow the engineer's detail — substituting one for
        the other changes the structure's behavior.
      - **Snug-tight vs. pretensioned vs. slip-critical.** Snug for bearing
        connections where slip is acceptable; pretensioned and slip-critical where
        fatigue, reversal, or no-slip is required. The spec, not convenience, decides.
      - **Turn-of-nut vs. DTI vs. tension-control bolts.** Pick the verification
      method
        the job allows: turn-of-nut for field reliability, DTI washers for visual
        verification, TC bolts for speed with built-in tension control.
      - **Crane pick vs. derrick vs. man-basket.** Size the lift method to the
      weight,
        reach, and access; never improvise a personnel lift on a crane not rigged and
        permitted for it.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Plan the erection sequence.** Read the erection drawings and the
      engineer's
         sequence; know which members brace which, and stage the steel in lift order.
      2. **Rig and signal.** Choose the hitch and sling for the piece's weight
      and CG,
         inspect the rigging, and fly it with one clear signalman.
      3. **Land and pin.** The connectors catch the piece, drift-pin the holes
      to align,
         and set enough bolts to make it stable before the crane releases.
      4. **Plumb and align.** Use cables, turnbuckles, come-alongs, and the
      surveyor's
         marks to bring the frame plumb, level, and true.
      5. **Bolt up and weld.** Tension the bolted connections to spec and
      verify; weld
         the moment connections per WPS; let the inspector check.
      6. **Decking and detail.** Lay and weld or fasten metal deck, install
      studs,
         bracing, and miscellaneous steel.
      7. **Inspect and release.** Confirm connections complete, bolts tensioned,
      welds
         passed, fall protection and netting in place until handoff.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Speed of erection vs. stability of the sequence.** Pushing ahead
      before a bay
        is braced is how a frame racks or collapses; the sequence exists for a reason.
      - **Bolted speed vs. welded continuity.** Bolting flies; welding takes
      time and
        inspection but delivers the rigid moment connection some designs require.
      - **Reach vs. capacity on the crane.** A bigger radius means less
      capacity;
        getting the piece there and being able to lift it are two different limits to
        respect.
      - **Weather window vs. safety.** Wind and ice raise the risk of flying
      steel and
        walking iron; the deadline never justifies a load that the wind can swing into
        someone.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - Two points of attachment, always — never both hooks off at once at
      height.

      - Drift pins align the holes; never finger your hand into a connection to
      feel
        for alignment.
      - Snug-tight then mark the nut; the turn from snug tells you the tension.

      - Stand outside the swing radius and never in the bite of a line.

      - A shallower sling angle means much higher leg load — keep angles above
      45°
        where you can.
      - Plumb the frame before you weld it; afterward the geometry is yours
      forever.

      - If you can't see the signalman, the load stops.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Under-tensioned bolts** — snug-tight left as final, so a slip-critical
      joint
        slips and the connection fatigues.
      - **Releasing the crane on too few bolts** — the piece isn't stable and
      the
        connection fails when the load comes off.
      - **Skipping bracing in the erection sequence** — the partial frame racks
      or
        goes over.
      - **Weld defects** — lack of fusion or penetration hidden under a
      good-looking
        cap, caught only by inspection.
      - **Rigging failure** — wrong hitch, overloaded sling, or shallow angle,
      dropping
        the load.
      - **Unprotected fall** — unhooking to move without a second lanyard, the
      trade's
        classic fatality.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **"Two bolts will hold it"** to free the crane faster on a connection
      that
        needs more.
      - **Free-climbing or unhooking to "just step over there."**

      - **Eyeballing bolt tension** instead of turn-of-nut, DTI, or TC
      verification.

      - **Riding the load or the hook** as a shortcut up.

      - **Welding a moment connection out of sequence** before the frame is
      plumbed.

      - **Ignoring the wind** because the schedule says fly it today.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Connector** — the ironworker who catches and pins incoming steel at
      the
        connection point.
      - **Snug-tight** — the bolt tightness reached with a few impact-wrench
      hits,
        bringing plies into contact; the starting point for tensioning.
      - **Pretensioned / slip-critical** — bolted joints tightened to a
      specified
        tension so the joint clamps and friction carries load.
      - **Turn-of-nut / DTI / TC bolt** — three accepted methods to achieve and
      verify
        bolt pretension.
      - **Moment connection** — a rigid joint that transfers bending, making the
      frame
        resist sway.
      - **Drift pin** — a tapered steel pin used to align bolt holes before
      bolting.

      - **The bite** — the danger zone in line with a tensioned cable that can
      snap
        back.
      - **Plumb up** — bringing columns and the frame truly vertical before
      locking
        connections.
      - **Decking** — the corrugated steel sheet that forms the floor and roof
      working
        surface.
      - **Spud wrench** — the connector's tool: a wrench on one end, a tapered
      drift on
        the other.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      The connector's spud wrench and a belt of drift pins; impact wrenches and
      torque

      multipliers for bolting; tension-control and DTI verification gear;
      come-alongs,

      turnbuckles, chain falls, and plumbing cables for alignment; rigging —
      slings,

      shackles, chokers, spreader bars — inspected before every pick; welding
      machines

      and electrodes for moment and field welds; cutting torch for fit-up; and a
      full

      fall-arrest kit with twin lanyards rated for steel erection. For the
      reinforcing

      trade, the rebar tie wrench, hickey bar for bending, and the
      cutting/bending

      equipment.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Ironworkers raise the frame after the foundations and anchor bolts are set
      by the

      concrete crew, working in tight coordination with the crane operator and

      signalman as a single unit, and following the erection sequence the
      structural

      engineer and the steel detailer laid out. The decking and the studs hand
      off to

      the concrete and the other trades who build on the frame; the glazier's
      curtain

      wall hangs on steel the ironworker set. The friction lives at the anchor
      bolts —

      where the concrete crew's tolerances meet the steel's — and at the
      inspection of

      bolted and welded connections, where the question is whether what's in the
      joint

      matches what the drawing demanded.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      A finished steel connection is buried under fireproofing, concrete, and
      finish,

      and an under-tensioned bolt or a cold weld looks exactly like a sound one
      until

      the building is loaded years later. The duties: tension every bolt and
      make every

      weld to the spec even though no one will see it again; never release a
      load or

      walk away from a connection that isn't truly stable; protect the people
      working

      and walking below from the dropped tool and the swinging load; and refuse
      to fly

      steel in conditions or sequences that trade a fatality for a day on the
      schedule.

      The frame holds up everything and everyone above it, on the faith that the

      connections were made right.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A connector is pressured to release the crane early.** A foreman behind

      schedule wants the crane freed after two bolts so it can fly the next
      beam. The

      expert connector refuses until the connection has the bolts the detail
      requires

      to be stable under the load the next piece will add; two bolts may hold
      the dead

      weight but won't take the eccentric load when the adjacent beam lands and
      twists

      the joint. He sets the required bolts to snug, confirms stability, then
      signals

      the release. Freeing the crane early would have risked the connection
      failing

      with a piece in the air above the deck crew.


      **Verifying bolt tension on a slip-critical joint.** A bridge gusset uses

      slip-critical connections. A helper has run the bolts down with an impact
      gun and

      calls them tight. The ironworker knows tight-by-feel isn't tension: he
      marks the

      snug position, applies the specified turn-of-nut (a half turn for this
      grip and

      grade), and where DTI washers are used, checks that the gaps have closed
      to the

      feeler-gauge limit. Two bolts hadn't actually reached snug before the
      "final"

      turn and were under-tensioned; he corrects them. Leaving them would have
      let the

      joint slip under traffic and fatigue.


      **Plumbing the frame before welding.** A three-story frame is bolted snug
      but one

      column line leans a half inch out of plumb. A rushed crew might start
      welding the

      moment connections to keep moving. The expert stops: once welded, the lean
      is

      permanent and every floor above inherits it. He sets plumbing cables and

      turnbuckles, pulls the line true against the surveyor's marks, confirms
      with a

      transit, and only then releases the welders. Welding first would have
      locked a

      crooked frame that the cladding and the elevators would fight forever.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The ironworker raises the steel the welder joins — and many ironworkers
      weld

      their own moment connections. The structural engineer designs the frame
      and the

      connection details the ironworker executes, and sets the erection
      sequence. The

      crane and heavy-equipment operator flies the steel as the ironworker's
      partner on

      every pick. The glazier hangs the curtain wall on the erected frame, and
      the

      concrete crew sets the anchor bolts the columns land on.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *AISC Steel Construction Manual* — American Institute of Steel
      Construction

      - *OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart R* — Steel Erection

      - *RCSC Specification for Structural Joints Using High-Strength Bolts*

      - AWS D1.1 *Structural Welding Code — Steel*
