Search found 3074 matches
- by cj737
- Mon Feb 19, 2024 11:39 pm
- Forum: Welding Projects - Welding project Ideas - Welding project plans
- Topic: Diy purge plugs
- Replies: 11
- Views: 13240
Re: Diy purge plugs
Has anyone tried re-purposing a sand blasting cabinet to weld small parts inside? Flood the compartment with Argon and weld away 8-) That’s a lot of argon to fill and keep filled that cabinet. Plus, you’d have to air seal it pretty well for it to be worthwhile. Then you’d have to work out getting y...
- by cj737
- Mon Feb 19, 2024 11:35 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: Holding Stainless Steel for Fit-Up
- Replies: 22
- Views: 5616
Re: Holding Stainless Steel for Fit-Up
You need to hold three pieces that intersect together and tack them up. Then another three. Two sides of one piece aligning one side of one piece that its end aligns to the third piece. (I know, that sounds complicated but if you grab some pieces and imagine putting them together it will make sense....
- by cj737
- Sun Feb 18, 2024 9:03 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: Holding Stainless Steel for Fit-Up
- Replies: 22
- Views: 5616
Re: Holding Stainless Steel for Fit-Up
Big cup, lots or argon, short welds, lots of post flow. Easy peasy.
- by cj737
- Sat Feb 17, 2024 9:57 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: Argon lighter or heavier then air?
- Replies: 6
- Views: 831
Re: Argon lighter or heavier then air?
The symptoms you describe don’t necessarily mean the window has lost its gas purge. For sake of discussion let’s call it argon, but other gases are also used. The condensation can simply be caused by poor insulation and the dew point is occurring on the inner layer, nearest the thermocline. Double p...
- by cj737
- Sat Feb 17, 2024 2:24 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: Tacks
- Replies: 12
- Views: 1778
Re: Tacks
You can also lay filler right at the joint, then hit it with a blast of amps. That will melt the filler onto the joint and you can whip the filler away.
- by cj737
- Sat Feb 17, 2024 2:23 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: Argon lighter or heavier then air?
- Replies: 6
- Views: 831
Re: Argon lighter or heavier then air?
It’s heavier than air. There might be the evidence of the “charge port” in the glass frame. There should also be a second “exhaust port”. You can rig up a nozzle to introduce the argon, but you’ll need to orient the pane with the exhaust at the top so once the argon fills the cavity, all air is push...
- by cj737
- Thu Feb 15, 2024 10:56 pm
- Forum: Member Introductions
- Topic: New guy saying hi.
- Replies: 45
- Views: 10375
Re: New guy saying hi.
What size filler rod is that? It looks like you’re having to travel too slowly on the outside corners and as such are over cooking the material (this is why the weld is so flat). For the flat beads, you’re dabbing too much filler into the weld. That created the ropey/wormy tall beads. Drop a filler ...
- by cj737
- Thu Feb 15, 2024 6:34 pm
- Forum: Welding Forum General Shop Talk
- Topic: Welding galvanized metal
- Replies: 7
- Views: 872
Re: Welding galvanized metal
I’ve welded miles of filler with TIG and never worn PPE. So too with MIG. Since the bill of Stick and FC I’ve done has been outdoors, no PPE there either. For Galvanized or coated metals, I’d probably not risk it and at least put on a mask. But if you’re outdoors and have it a good scrub, probably j...
- by cj737
- Wed Feb 14, 2024 1:18 pm
- Forum: Welding Forum General Shop Talk
- Topic: Welding galvanized metal
- Replies: 7
- Views: 872
Re: Welding galvanized metal
Brazing doesn’t melt the parent material. It only heats the parent enough to melt the filler. So no, PPE isn’t required. It’s ALWAYS recommended when welding anything truth be told. I’ve seen lots of folks not wear it. Welders don’t grow old, they just retire early. Either their eyes fail, hands sha...
- by cj737
- Wed Feb 14, 2024 9:53 am
- Forum: Welding Forum General Shop Talk
- Topic: Welding galvanized metal
- Replies: 7
- Views: 872
Re: Welding galvanized metal
You can grind the galvanizing off, both sides and far enough away from your weld and then weld it safely. I’d still strongly encourage a respirator. Even stick welding should be done with a respirator (not common unfortunately). The fumes can lead to Parkinson’s and other nervous system ailments. Of...
- by cj737
- Wed Feb 14, 2024 9:51 am
- Forum: Member Introductions
- Topic: New guy saying hi.
- Replies: 45
- Views: 10375
Re: New guy saying hi.
One thing to know early on is that you can always make welds look pretty after, but they have to be strong first. A trick I used/use (even now occasionally) is to lay the first pass in, then let the weld cool, and run over it again a second time, no filler, with pulse only. It can help tidy up the w...
- by cj737
- Wed Feb 14, 2024 12:33 am
- Forum: Welding Forum General Shop Talk
- Topic: holding small steel
- Replies: 5
- Views: 803
Re: holding small steel
Depending upon the strength of the magnet (and its proximity to the weld) it can aggravate a TIG arc in my experience. Might not be such a problem for a quick tack though.
- by cj737
- Wed Feb 14, 2024 12:27 am
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: Tacks
- Replies: 12
- Views: 1778
Re: Tacks
I have had pulse active (stainless exhausts or Ti tubing) when tacking, but it was not intentional. For those two metals, quicker control of the heat for a tack is advantageous (in my book).
- by cj737
- Tue Feb 13, 2024 8:41 am
- Forum: Mig and Flux Core - gas metal arc welding & flux cored arc welding
- Topic: Converted flux core welder to stick welder, helmet question
- Replies: 7
- Views: 1016
Re: Converted flux core welder to stick welder, helmet question
If it’s a low end FC machine, to run stick you’d either need to run DCEN rods or be able to convert the machine to DCEP, right?
- by cj737
- Mon Feb 12, 2024 11:46 pm
- Forum: Mig and Flux Core - gas metal arc welding & flux cored arc welding
- Topic: Converted flux core welder to stick welder, helmet question
- Replies: 7
- Views: 1016
Re: Converted flux core welder to stick welder, helmet question
Yes, the same helmet can be used.
- by cj737
- Sat Feb 10, 2024 7:46 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: First Mistake - New to TIG
- Replies: 156
- Views: 74883
Re: First Mistake - New to TIG
Lower the heat you’re using and you’ll have better results. You almost want to have to “wait” for the filler to melt because the base is not quite hot enough. Loitering heats the base enough to get the filler to melt.
If you’re too hot, you run the risk of melting into the base and mixing the metals.
If you’re too hot, you run the risk of melting into the base and mixing the metals.
- by cj737
- Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:56 am
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: First Mistake - New to TIG
- Replies: 156
- Views: 74883
Re: First Mistake - New to TIG
It does to me. You can always adjust up or down with the pedal to find your comfort zone.
- by cj737
- Fri Feb 09, 2024 9:55 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: First Mistake - New to TIG
- Replies: 156
- Views: 74883
Re: First Mistake - New to TIG
No. Much less heated is needed. You are only “heating the base material” enough to melt the filler. You’re not fusing the filler with the parent. For 1/8” I steel TIG around 130. For SilBr I’m closer to 90-95. That’s based off 3/32” filler. I like to run hot so the puddle is fluid. It allows me to m...
- by cj737
- Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:06 pm
- Forum: Stick Welding/Arc Welding - Shielded Metal Arc Welding
- Topic: How do I track with stick welds?
- Replies: 64
- Views: 5871
Re: How do I track with stick welds?
Welding straight takes practice. Lots of practice. And when you are padding beads on a flat piece of material with no guidelines, it’s darn near impossible (as you’ve correctly discovered). The workaround is easy though: use a straight edge and a scribe/awl/scratch tool and make scratch lines in the...
- by cj737
- Thu Feb 08, 2024 5:25 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: First Mistake - New to TIG
- Replies: 156
- Views: 74883
Re: First Mistake - New to TIG
Yes, run beads from end to end, overlapping slightly. Then you can grind the whole face flat and smooth and have a soft face that’s super shiny.
- by cj737
- Thu Feb 08, 2024 2:33 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: First Mistake - New to TIG
- Replies: 156
- Views: 74883
Re: First Mistake - New to TIG
I would encourage you to do a more comprehensive job cleaning those parts front, back and edges before TIG welding them. You’d be surprised at how much better your arc and puddle behave with clean metal. And for kicks, next time, weld each face with different types of filler wire. 70s2 on one face, ...
- by cj737
- Thu Feb 08, 2024 9:23 am
- Forum: Stick Welding/Arc Welding - Shielded Metal Arc Welding
- Topic: How do I track with stick welds?
- Replies: 64
- Views: 5871
Re: How do I track with stick welds?
It is. Order it in 3/32 or 2.4mm if they have it
- by cj737
- Thu Feb 08, 2024 9:21 am
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: First Mistake - New to TIG
- Replies: 156
- Views: 74883
Re: First Mistake - New to TIG
Not much wrong with those results
- by cj737
- Wed Feb 07, 2024 7:04 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: First Mistake - New to TIG
- Replies: 156
- Views: 74883
Re: First Mistake - New to TIG
Dropping from a #8 to a #5 helps with outside corners. The bend actually splits the argon shield and heats up the puddle (akin to long arcing). If you can, drop to a #5 and try a few runs. The tighter corner may help you more than you’d think. It really does help dial in the heat zone and keep the w...
- by cj737
- Wed Feb 07, 2024 5:10 pm
- Forum: Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- Topic: First Mistake - New to TIG
- Replies: 156
- Views: 74883
Re: First Mistake - New to TIG
Sticky filler is too cold parent metal (usually). For 11 ga corners, I like #5, 12-15cfh, and I run it on 130 amps with a pedal to ease off. Outside corners really depend heavily on direction. Are you up, down, flat, horiz? If you’re comfy, I like downhill so gravity drags the puddle into the heat s...
Jump to
- Introductions & How to Use the Forum
- ↳ Welcome!
- ↳ Member Introductions
- ↳ How to Use the Forum
- ↳ Moderator Applications
- Welding Discussion
- ↳ Metal Cutting
- ↳ Tig Welding - Tig Welding Aluminum - Tig Welding Techniques - Aluminum Tig Welding
- ↳ Mig and Flux Core - gas metal arc welding & flux cored arc welding
- ↳ Stick Welding/Arc Welding - Shielded Metal Arc Welding
- ↳ Welding Forum General Shop Talk
- ↳ Welding Certification - Stick/Arc Welding, Tig Welding, Mig Welding Certification tests - Welding Tests of all kinds
- ↳ Welding Projects - Welding project Ideas - Welding project plans
- ↳ Product Reviews
- ↳ Fuel Gas Heating
- Welding Tips & Tricks
- ↳ Video Discussion
- ↳ Wish List
- Announcements & Feedback
- ↳ Forum News
- ↳ Suggestions, Feedback and Support
- Welding Marketplace
- ↳ Welding Jobs - Industrial Welding Jobs - Pipe Welding Jobs - Tig Welding Jobs
- ↳ Classifieds - Buy, Sell, Trade Used Welding Equipment
- Welding Resources
- ↳ Tradeshows, Seminars and Events
- ↳ The Welding Library
- ↳ Education Opportunities