mig and flux core tips and techniques, equipment, filler metal
Stephen
  • Posts:
  • Joined:
    Sun May 30, 2021 12:33 pm

A pro at making crooked welds, boring holes in miters and second guessing every weld.

On the good side I have cut my welds and I CAN make a serviceable weld -sometimes.

Before I ask a barrage of questions I will take some time to search the forum…

Thank you in advance :D
BugHunter
  • Posts:
  • Joined:
    Sun Apr 19, 2020 12:54 pm

Practice makes perfect... Well, good practice does.

Don't worry about asking the same question someone else already did. This isn't like many forums where some people act like it's some personal hardship if someone asks the same thing someone else already asked. Usually it's those same people who bitch about you searching and replying to an oder thread. :lol:
BillE.Dee
  • Posts:
  • Joined:
    Mon Nov 27, 2017 8:53 pm
  • Location:
    Pennsylvania (Northeast corner)

Hello Stephen and welcome. Buggy is correct about "don't be afraid of asking a question that may have been asked before." There's a great bunch of folks and info available in here. The best way to get answers is to provide lots of info ... type of material being welded, shielding gas, amperage setting, filler wire, etc.
Gdarc21
  • Posts:
  • Joined:
    Wed Aug 04, 2021 6:44 am

I know this is an older thread but in the spirit of helping just a few things ive found.
Apart from the obvious heat settings equations etc and text book stuff heres some stuff you learn and go 'oh, thats better' in point form, not because its a lecture just easier to read :D
1) crooked lines: etch a line with thick cut off wheel. Etch not cut. Draw a chalk line, etch with grinder etc. On multiple pass fillets especially overhead this helps keep your line well and looks mint.
2) boring holes: its always handy with welds to tack both ends before welding it. It helps with hot short(cracking) when there is a spot of metal to finish on. With thin sections like general fab the peno is not xray so this wont hurt. Also if you tack it up with a good fit and run a grinder to slighty bevel about 1mm deep it gives the weld a nice finish. You wont need to grind it neat.
3) second guessing is something that all good tradies do, dont do your head in over it and sometime down the road confidence will tame it well.
But this is why over thinker get called to fix some stuff that others leave behind.
Over all its just like sex, its all about heat control, hand speed and willingness to get burned and you never stick your hand where you wouldnt put your.............

Anyways have fun.
Post Reply