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Anything welding

Discussion in 'Garage / Workshop' started by EL TACOROJO, Sep 17, 2010.

  1. Apr 25, 2020 at 7:27 PM
    Tacman19

    Tacman19 Well-Known Member

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    Looks good. 70S6 wire I suppose so I would clean the metal good, and turn it up. Let it eat man. Might see less splatter. I weld outside so I run 20 on the gas. It helps too. Lol
    Zim
     
    Strictlytoyz[QUOTED] likes this.
  2. Apr 25, 2020 at 7:30 PM
    Tacman19

    Tacman19 Well-Known Member

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    Is that a casting and did you heat it first?? Beautiful.
    Zim
     
  3. Apr 25, 2020 at 9:36 PM
    Strictlytoyz

    Strictlytoyz Well-Known Member

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    I'll give .030 a try see how much of a difference it makes. I plan on getting some gas sometime in the next couple of days. See if it helps.

    Yeah i definitely noticed much better appearance when i clean the material really well. Thanks for the tips!
     
  4. Apr 25, 2020 at 9:43 PM
    INBONESTRYKER

    INBONESTRYKER Well-Known Member

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    @Strictlytoyz Your 140 will work best with .030 solid wire too.
     
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  5. Apr 26, 2020 at 4:48 AM
    Wyoming09

    Wyoming09 Well-Known Member

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    Myself I would use nothing but .023 hard wire unless your welding production and piece rate.

    Pretty much the size I use for most of the welding I do.

    In my case simple to go to .045 or larger if I need to .
     
    plurpimpin likes this.
  6. Apr 26, 2020 at 6:47 AM
    cynicalrider

    cynicalrider #NFG

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    I switched to my spool of .035 this weekend since I was welding some thicker stuff that would make me feel comfortable welding with thicker wire. Supposedly according to my chart I am supposed to run the welder maxed for 3/16". It undercut the shit out of 3/8" lol, but of course it could have been me. Also blew through my 1/8" round tube once or twice, but it was nice getting a thicker bead that I would have needed multiple passes on my .023. Really this was just for me to learn how to change spools, and resetting up the drive tension (I was having large random spatter from inconsistent feeding when I swapped) and all that. Was good learning experience since I bought this welder with a spool on it already.

    I def see what @Wyoming09 means about not needing much more than .023 for most stuff now lol.

    Anyway, enough rambling, here are my welds. Welding under the bed sucks. I found that for ideal position stuff I like the lower case e approach, but the c's are much easier in out of position stuff, for me anyway.

    [​IMG]Untitled by Michael Halat, on Flickr
    [​IMG]Untitled by Michael Halat, on Flickr
    [​IMG]Untitled by Michael Halat, on Flickr
    [​IMG]Untitled by Michael Halat, on Flickr

    Most of my vert stuff that's not a fillet I go down instead of up. My ups on anything else never look good. I'll be switching back to my .023 after this project is over lol.
     
  7. Apr 26, 2020 at 6:58 AM
    EatSleepTacos

    EatSleepTacos Well-Known Member

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    Have you tried 030 before? It’s my favorite wire, kinda a jack of all trades imo. I comfortably weld 1/4” with it down to sheet metal, in a pinch. Welds look good btw. My out of position go-to is a C as well, just Slowly jump back and forth between the two pieces best I can.
     
    Rockslide, Drainbung and koditten like this.
  8. Apr 26, 2020 at 7:08 AM
    cynicalrider

    cynicalrider #NFG

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    I haven't because I felt the .023 lets me do super thin sheet metal very easily, so I figured getting the spool of .035 would be the opposite if I needed to do anything thicker. Well that's a lie, I have welded with other peoples welders with .030 and I do agree it is good for all around truck stuff, but I do wonder if I can do the super thin 20-22g stuff I have done with .030 as easily as I do now. Would be nice to not have to swap spools though.
     
    Drainbung likes this.
  9. Apr 26, 2020 at 7:11 AM
    4Running Daily

    4Running Daily Long Live ZS

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    20-22 ga is tough depending on how adjustable your weld settings are. The Hobart "1-7" doesn't quite do it. I swap from .030 to .023 if I'm doing less than 1/8" (11 GA).
     
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  10. Apr 26, 2020 at 7:28 AM
    glorifiedwelder

    glorifiedwelder IG= @Liquid_Torch

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    This. I don’t run anything besides .023 hard wire in the smaller machines.
     
  11. Apr 26, 2020 at 7:46 AM
    EatSleepTacos

    EatSleepTacos Well-Known Member

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    I guess it'd all depends on the frequency at which you weld different thicknesses. If you're regularly doing sheet metal then 023 definitely. I can comfortably weld down to 20 gauge with 030 but I'll be honest, I haven't tried 023 on it before. I've just never bothered switching spools so for all I know I could be missing out.
     
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  12. Apr 26, 2020 at 8:17 AM
    KILLINTIME

    KILLINTIME Like a Villain

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    Thanks! No pre heating and that is stainless 316L.
     
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  13. Apr 26, 2020 at 8:36 AM
    Strictlytoyz

    Strictlytoyz Well-Known Member

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    Looks solid man, hoping to get good enough to trust myself welding onto the truck. Definitely a long ways away.
     
  14. Apr 26, 2020 at 9:20 AM
    snowboard704

    snowboard704 Well-Known Member

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    Photo dump of some recent stuff plus the rear bumper added onto the flatbed and tied into the frame on the last truck, simple but clean in my opinion 29E6F601-0DAF-4397-98A0-13946C1993CE.jpg90B49946-5EF9-4C8D-B7ED-A928E8C161B5.jpg2E0F3BC5-8C7E-4D73-9BF3-5A8AEE437B71.jpgE9168AC7-C44C-488E-8803-60AFEED75FD1.jpgD0CA7EF7-AA16-4B03-BC83-71B9C3F13A50.jpgA41A339E-E328-4AB0-A934-C2BD603BC3F3.jpg6082D4C8-E13F-4C95-AF08-921C18153C46.jpg8B7DB048-8EB5-4AD0-86D2-77E46A282775.jpg02AFB1CB-79FD-4CA8-853C-823E3D21358C.jpg169C3B71-F0D7-4B2B-B714-1E6B6C464EC8.jpg49717CFC-2ED0-4C61-876E-DA4AAC6A5E70.jpg
     
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  15. Apr 26, 2020 at 9:30 AM
    Wyoming09

    Wyoming09 Well-Known Member

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    It all depends what your doing and how much .

    A few brackets with 1/2" flat stock no problem with .023 hard wire for me.

    Then a 5 yard loader bucket rebuild I would swap feeders real quick.

    Then the older I get the lazier I get

    When you have all the processes and have all the wires sizes I could every need at hand I
    would venture 90% of what I do is .023 hard wire .
     
  16. Apr 26, 2020 at 9:39 AM
    Wyoming09

    Wyoming09 Well-Known Member

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  17. Apr 26, 2020 at 12:47 PM
    BamaTaco56

    BamaTaco56 Well-Known Member

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    This has to be the worst part

    301FF7F4-5202-405D-BC83-2BFBB0ECDFF9.jpg
    2D71DFE7-C4B4-4FD4-9999-71DAEFCC01A9.jpg
     
  18. Apr 26, 2020 at 1:15 PM
    Wyoming09

    Wyoming09 Well-Known Member

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    I would do them all day long!

    Section Aluminum plates into the floor of a garbage trailer not only does it cook out of the floor no matter the prep method getting things welded without inclusions is interesting
     
  19. Apr 26, 2020 at 1:19 PM
    EatSleepTacos

    EatSleepTacos Well-Known Member

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    I like the way you did that. You could then pass the recovery point through the face, weld it there, and weld it all along that mounting plate.

    edit: I’d cap all the ends that you can so you don’t have to worry about corrosion in the tube. If you weren’t already planning. It looks like you know what you’re doing though so I’ll shut up :D
     
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  20. Apr 26, 2020 at 1:29 PM
    BamaTaco56

    BamaTaco56 Well-Known Member

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    I actually did this with the recovery points in mind. And it’s easier for me to trust my welds with more surface contact.

    I need to find a source for the recovery points though. Haven’t found any that are long enough.

    I have you fooled if you think I know what I’m doing, lol
     
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