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Differences in 7018 and single pass vs multi pass with weave on second pass...Cut, Etch, Learn.
Best to you and yours,

jody

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    Thu Jan 06, 2011 11:40 pm
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    Near New Orleans

I've been doing a lot of cut-etch-learn lately. Some of my stuff gets x-rayed, dye-pen'd, helium leak tested, and/or overpressure tested, but none of these are as informative as physically seeing the fusion and penetration in a weld.

I enjoyed watching you burn some 7018! I'm rather out of practice, myself, and it might take several rods to get back to the rhythm.

Steve
Poleframer
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    Wed Feb 01, 2017 12:47 am

7018 has always been my go to for welding. I am a bit pissed at firepower tho. For years I'd been buying firepower 7018 at napa, and LOVED it' When you opened the 5 lb box, there was your rod, sealed tight in a heavy plastic bag, dry as a bone.
If I just had occasional welds to do I would just poke 1 rod through the bag, and feed them out through that as needed, and keep it in a blue tube for storage. They kept very well even through the winters in my shed that way.
Then a couple years ago...no plastic bag. Burned about like the rods from hobart or radnor, sucked. I was upset. I think even the moisture they pick up in shipping and sitting in a store affects them.
Heating helps, but they arent like factory fresh.
Might have to give excalibur a go.
Farmwelding
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    Thu Mar 10, 2016 11:37 pm
  • Location:
    Wisconsin

I haven't done much at all woth 7018 but I absolutely love those excaliburs. Every once in sheik I'll grab a different one and the arc is just so different and then an Excalibur and smooth sailing again.
A student now but really want to weld everyday. Want to learn everything about everything. Want to become a knower of all and master of none.
Instagram: @farmwelding
Nick
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