Welding

Anything to do with mechanical, construction etc

Re: Welding

Postby jeff0520 » Mon Apr 29, 2013 12:27 am

Revisiting this old thread to report that I believe I have solved the problem. I convinced a friend of a friend who is a weld inspector for NASA to come over to my house and explain what I was doing wrong. Turns out I was operating on some faulty information from jr. high school.
I had a shop teacher way back then teach a one-class lesson on welding that included a 10 minute talk on stick welding, 20 minutes of waiting line for the ONE welder they had, and a 20 second try at it. That teacher said you moved the stick in small circles in a "stirring motion" to fuse the metal together. I was trying that same "stirring motion" and spreading my heat out to much and getting blobs instead of beads, and insufficiant heat to make anything reliably stick to anything else. Amazing what dispelling that faulty info did. I welded together a steel bumper assembly tonight, and when I wacked it with a hammer, I made a dimple in the metal next to the weld, and the weld did not fall apart :dancing
Interestingly the NASA weld inspector said the HF 90 amp flux core welder was a reasonably good little welder so long as you throw away the crap wire it comes with, (I told him what welder I had, and he came carrying a spool of Lincoln flux core wire.) and you use it for what it's meant for, light duty welding, mostly on material 3/16th thick or less. He said most of the bad welds he has seen from those machines boiled down to either bad terchnique, bad welding wire, or asking this chihuahua sized welder to do a pitt bull sized job.
Best part is all this expert assistance cost me was $15.00 for a small spool of Lincoln wire, a case of beer, and one of my wife's home cooked dinners. The deal doesn't get much better than that. :applause:
Hypno-Toad's Command Post, the build thread! http://www.tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?f=50&t=50384

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Re: Welding

Postby webbaldo » Mon Apr 29, 2013 6:40 am

Im fine welding car panels but useless on anything thicker

try www.mig-welding.co.uk, British but helped me alot
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Re: Welding

Postby Dale M. » Mon Apr 29, 2013 9:18 am

Actually wire will make difference..... I am not real happy with Lincoln wire and totally avoid anything from HF ... Have had really good luck with Hobart and Forney brand wires... I know people will say wire is wire and wires are basically same composition of alloys, but I disagree and there are wires that work well and wires that do not work well....

If you want some really good welding explanation of procedures and practices you might look at what this guy can do...

http://www.youtube.com/user/weldingtips ... s?feature=

A few days ago I tried the technique he explains in video below, and it was a vast improvement in my welds....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4RrDeUKcH4

Also weld joint prep is everything.... CLEAN materials and beveled edges on larger seams and proper fit (or gap) of seam.. I have come to conclusion that the set-up for weld process is as important as technique you use... Also if you can get set-up in position where you can be most comfortable (welding table?)

Also, if you have older eyes, get magnifying lenses for hood and put LOTS of external light on area to weld, sounds silly with dark lens of hood, but it actually makes seam show up better and arc seem less intense....

Find good welding forum for help, questions, answers and practice a lot...

Dale
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